Sources of American Law: An Introduction to Legal Research

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1 University of Kentucky UKnowledge Law Faculty Books Law Faculty Publications 2015 Sources of American Law: An Introduction to Legal Research Tina M. Brooks University of Kentucky College of Law, Beau Steenken University of Kentucky College of Law, Click here to let us know how access to this document benefits you. Follow this and additional works at: Part of the Legal Writing and Research Commons Recommended Citation Brooks, Tina M. and Steenken, Beau, "Sources of American Law: An Introduction to Legal Research" (2015). Law Faculty Books This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Law Faculty Publications at UKnowledge. It has been accepted for inclusion in Law Faculty Books by an authorized administrator of UKnowledge. For more information, please contact

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3 Sources of American Law An Introduction to Legal Research Beau Steenken Instructional Services Librarian University of Kentucky College of Law Tina M. Brooks Electronic Services Librarian University of Kentucky College of Law elangdell Press 2015

4 iii About the Authors Beau Steenken joined the Law Library Faculty at the University of Kentucky in September As Instructional Services Librarian, he engaged in a revamp of the Legal Research curriculum as the UK College of Law shifted from an adjunct-model to a full-time faculty model of LRW instruction. He teaches two to four sections of 1L Legal Research a year and also coordinates informal research instruction of various sorts. Before coming to the University of Kentucky, he managed to collect a B.A., a J.D., and an M.S.I.S. from the University of Texas, as well as an M.A. in history from Texas State University and an LL.M. in Public International law from the University of Nottingham, where he also took up archery. Tina M. Brooks joined the Law Library Faculty at the University of Kentucky in July As Electronic Services Librarian, she manages the University of Kentucky Law Library s website and electronic resources and also teaches two sections of the 1L Legal Research course. She received a B.A. in History and Spanish from the University of Northern Iowa in 2005, a J.D. from the University of Nebraska College of Law in 2009, and an M.S. in Information Studies from the University of Texas School of Information in 2011.

5 iv About elangdell Press The Center for Computer-Assisted Legal Instruction (CALI ) is: a nonprofit organization with over 200 member US law schools, an innovative force pushing legal education toward change for the better. There are benefits to CALI membership for your school, firm, or organization. elangdell is our electronic press with a mission to publish more open books for legal education. How do we define "open?" Compatibility with devices like smartphones, tablets, and e-readers; as well as print. The right for educators to remix the materials through more lenient copyright policies. The ability for educators and students to adopt the materials for free. Find available and upcoming elangdell titles at elangdell.cali.org. Show support for CALI by following us on Facebook and Twitter, and by telling your friends and colleagues where you received your free book.

6 v Notices & Permissions CALI gratefully acknowledges permission from the following individuals and organizations to reprint materials: Figure 2.4.1a: The table of contents for Chapter 10 of Title 18 of the United States Code Annotated, 2015 Thomson Reuters. Reprinted with the permission of Thomson Reuters. Figure 2.4.1b: The table of contents for Title 18 of the United States Code Annotated, 2015 Thomson Reuters. Reprinted with the permission of Thomson Reuters. Figure 2.4.2: HAW. REV. STAT. ANN (West 2008), 2008 Thomson/West. Reprinted with the permission of Thomson Reuters. Figure : Excerpt from the 2013 General Index of West s Hawai i Revised Statutes Annotated, 2014 Thomson Reuters. Reprinted with the permission of Thomson Reuters. Figure : The 2014 U.S.C.A. Popular Names Table Entry for the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, 2014 Thomson Reuters. Reprinted with the permission of Thomson Reuters. Figure : Sample Pocket-Part Entries from Michie s Kentucky Revised Statutes. KY. REV. STAT. ANN , (LexisNexis Supp ). Reprinted from LexisNexis with permission. Copyright 2015 Matthew Bender & Company, Inc., a LexisNexis company. All rights reserved. Figure 3.3.1: A Map of West s Regional Reporter System. Reprinted with the permission of Thomson Reuters. Figure 3.3.3: A Case as it Appears in a West Reporter, 293 N.W.2d 317, 1982 West Publishing Company. Reprinted with the permission of Thomson Reuters. Figure 3.4.2a: Sample Entry from the Federal Practice Digest 5th, 3 F P D 5th 554, 2013 Thomson Reuters. Reprinted with the permission of Thomson Reuters. Figure 3.4.2b: An Excerpt of West s Outline of the Law as found in the Federal Practice Digest 5th, 3 F P D 5th 467, 2013 Thomson Reuters. Reprinted with the permission of Thomson Reuters.

7 vi Figure 3.4.3: Excerpt from West s Key Number Translation Table for Constitutional Law, 5 Ky D 2d Thomson/West. Reprinted with the permission of Thomson Reuters. Figure 5.3.3: Screenshot and screencast of searching for due process on WestlawNext Thomson Reuters. Reprinted with the permission of Thomson Reuters. Figure 5.3.1: Screenshot and screencast of a natural language search on WestlawNext Thomson Reuters. Reprinted with the permission of Thomson Reuters. Figure 5.3.2b: Screenshot and screencast of an advanced search using multiple operators on Westlaw Thomson Reuters. Reprinted with the permission of Thomson Reuters. Figure 5.3.2c: Screenshot and screencast of an advanced search on Westlaw using a field search Thomson Reuters. Reprinted with the permission of Thomson Reuters. Figure 5.3.3: Screenshot and screencast of browsing on Lexis Advance. Reprinted from LexisNexis with permission. Copyright 2015 LexisNexis. All rights reserved. Figure 5.3.4: Screenshot and screencast of using filters on Bloomberg Law to narrow in on relevant laws. Reproduced with permission from Bloomberg Law. Copyright (2015) by The Bureau of National Affairs, Inc. ( ) < Figure 5.4: Screenshot and screencast of using connectors on Bloomberg Law to narrow in on relevant cases. Reproduced with permission from Bloomberg Law. Copyright (2015) by The Bureau of National Affairs, Inc. ( ) < Figure 5.5a: Screenshot and screencast of shepardizing the seminal case Marbury v. Madison on Lexis Advance. Reprinted from LexisNexis with permission. Copyright 2015 LexisNexis. All rights reserved. Figure 5.5b: Screenshot and screencast of using an electronic citator (Lexis Advance) as a research tool. Reprinted from LexisNexis with permission. Copyright 2015 LexisNexis. All rights reserved. Figure 5.5d: Screenshot and screencast of researching a case s history using WestlawNext Thomson Reuters. Reprinted with the permission of Thomson Reuters.

8 vii Figure a: Screenshot of types of Intellectual Property Secondary Sources on WestlawNext Thomson Reuters. Reprinted with the permission of Thomson Reuters. Figure b: Screenshot of Filters for Narrowing Sources in Lexis Advance. Reprinted from LexisNexis with permission. Copyright 2015 LexisNexis. All rights reserved. Figure : Screenshot and screencast of using Worldcat to find a Treatise OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Inc. Used with OCLC s permission. Worldcat is a registered trademark/service mark of OCLC. Figure 6.3.3: Screenshot of using an electronic index on WestlawNext Thomson Reuters. Reprinted with the permission of Thomson Reuters. Figure 6.3.6: Screenshot and screencast of HeinOnline for journal research. Used with permission of William S. Hein & Co., Inc. This is the first version of the first edition of this book, updated July 15, Visit for the latest version and for revision history. This work by Beau Steenken and Tina Brooks is licensed and published by CALI elangdell Press under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non- Commerical-ShareAlike 3.0 License. In brief, the terms of that license are that you may copy, distribute, and display this work, or make derivative works, so long as you give CALI elangdell Press and the author credit; you do not use this work for commercial purposes; and you distribute any works derived from this one under the same licensing terms as this. Suggested attribution format for original work: Beau Steenken & Tina Brooks, Sources of American Law: an Introduction to Legal Research, Published by CALI elangdell Press. Available under a Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 3.0. CALI and elangdell are United States federally registered trademarks owned by the Center for Computer-Assisted Legal Instruction. The cover

9 viii art design is a copyrighted work of CALI, all rights reserved. The CALI graphical logo is a trademark and may not be used without permission. Should you create derivative works based on the text of this book or other Creative Commons materials therein, you may not use this book s cover art and the aforementioned logos, or any derivative thereof, to imply endorsement or otherwise without written permission from CALI. This material does not contain nor is intended to be legal advice. Users seeking legal advice should consult with a licensed attorney in their jurisdiction. The editors have endeavored to provide complete and accurate information in this book. However, CALI does not warrant that the information provided is complete and accurate. CALI disclaims all liability to any person for any loss caused by errors or omissions in this collection of information. Version 1: Updated July 23, 2015.

10 ix Table of Contents Sources of American Law... 2 An Introduction to Legal Research... 2 About the Authors... iii About elangdell Press... iv Notices & Permissions... v Table of Contents... ix Preface... xiv The United States Legal System Learning Objectives for Chapter Introduction to Researching the Law Federalism Origins of American Federalism Impact of Federalism on Legal Research Separation of Powers and Sources of Law Constitutions Statutes Judicial Opinions Administrative Regulations Hierarchy of Authority Primary v. Secondary Authority Mandatory v. Persuasive Authority Determining Weight of Authority Concluding Exercises for Chapter Introductory Hierarchy of Authority Exercise Intermediate Hierarchy of Authority Exercise Advanced Hierarchy of Authority Exercise Recommended CALI Lessons for Further Practice Constitutions & Statutes... 38

11 x 2.1 Learning Objectives for Chapter Constitutions & Statutes Life Cycle of a Statute Using Codes Codes & Topical Organization Annotations Using Codes in Print Local Legislation Interpreting Constitutions and Statutes Constitutional History & Framers Intent Legislative History & Legislative Intent Concluding Exercises for Chapter Introductory Exercise on Code Research Intermediate Exercise on Code Research Advanced Exercise on Code Research Recommended CALI Lessons for Further Practice Judicial Opinions & Common Law Learning Objectives for Chapter Judicial Opinions and the Common Law Case Reporters Types of Reporters Finding an Opinion in a Reporter Using a Reported Case Unreported Cases & Court Dockets Digests Types of Digests Using Digests to Find Opinions Updating Digests Subsequent Treatment of Judicial Opinions Concluding Exercises for Chapter

12 xi Introductory Exercise on Case Research Intermediate Exercise on Case Research Advanced Exercise on Case Research Recommended CALI Lessons for Further Practice Administrative Regulations Learning Objectives for Chapter Delegated Rule-Making Authority Researching Federal Regulations The C.F.R The L.S.A The F.R Administrative Decisions & Guidance State Regulations Concluding Exercises for Chapter Introductory Exercise on Researching Regulations Intermediate Exercise on Researching Administrative Guidance Advanced Exercise on Researching Regulations Recommended CALI Lessons for Further Practice Electronic Research Learning Objectives for Chapter Introduction to Electronic Research Basic Processes of Electronic Research Searching Search Operators & Advance Searching Browsing Filtering Combining the Basic Processes for Efficient Research Electronic Citators Concluding Exercises for Chapter

13 xii Introductory Exercise on Electronic Research Intermediate Exercise on Electronic Research Advanced Exercise on Electronic Research Recommended CALI Lessons for Further Practice Secondary Sources Learning Objectives for This Chapter Overview of Legal Secondary Sources Common Types of Secondary Sources Uses of Secondary Sources Researching Secondary Sources Finding an Appropriate Secondary Source Using Secondary Sources in Print Using Electronic Secondary Sources Law Review & Journal Articles Concluding Exercises for Chapter Introductory Exercise on Secondary Sources Intermediate Exercise on Secondary Sources Advanced Exercise on Secondary Sources Recommended CALI Lessons for Further Practice The Research Process Learning Objectives Essential Steps of the Research Process Familiarize Yourself with the Legal Problem Define the Scope of the Research Construct Search Queries Gather Primary Authorities Analyze and Update Primary Authorities Research and Writing as a Recursive Process Common Research Concerns When To Stop Researching

14 xiii Not Finding Enough Relevant Authorities Finding Too Many Relevant Authorities Concluding Remarks Recommended CALI Lessons for Further Practice

15 xiv Preface At its most basic definition the practice of law comprises conducting research to find relevant rules of law and then applying those rules to the specific set of circumstances faced by a client. However, in American law, the legal rules to be applied derive from myriad sources, complicating the process and making legal research different from other sorts of research. This text introduces law students to the new kind of research required to study and to practice law. It seeks to demystify the art of legal research by following a Source and Process approach. First, the text introduces students to the major sources of American law and describes the forms the various authorities take in print. After establishing this base, the text proceeds to instruct students on the tools they will most likely use in practice, namely electronic research platforms and legal treatises. Finally, the text illustrates how the different pieces come together in the legal research process. The text is intended to be used for introductory legal research courses for first year law students with little or no experience with legal sources or legal research. It is the authors experience that beginning students better understand the role of each source of law in the U.S. system if it is introduced on its own in print form. Students also tend to focus more on efficient processes if the processes are introduced independently of sources of law. The organization of the text, therefore, deliberately introduces sources of law in print before moving on to electronic research techniques, the use of secondary sources, and the research process. The authors follow a similar organization in their own research courses but would like to emphasize that they do so for pedagogical reasons specifically with 1Ls in mind.

16 Chapter 1 The United States Legal System The simplest form of remedy for the uncertainty of the regime of primary rules is the introduction of what we shall call a rule of recognition Wherever such a rule of recognition is accepted, both private persons and officials are provided with authoritative criteria for identifying primary rules of obligation. H.L.A. Hart, The Concept of Law We the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America. Preamble to the United States Constitution 1.1 Learning Objectives for Chapter 1 In working through this chapter, students should strive to be able to: Describe key features of the U.S. legal system including: o Federalism, o Separation of Powers, o Sources of Law, and o Weight & Hierarchy of Authority. Assess how the structure of the legal system frames research.

17 Introduction to Researching the Law The practice of law necessarily involves a significant amount of research. In fact, the average lawyer spends much of her work time researching. This makes sense when one considers that American law as a field is too vast, too varied, and too detailed for any one lawyer to keep all of it solely by memory. Furthermore, the law is a living thing; it tends to change over time. Thus, in order to answer clients legal questions, lawyers typically conduct research into the laws affecting their clients. Several things make legal research different from the types of research most law students performed prior to law school. First, rules of law tend to be both highly detailed and highly nuanced, so legal research often includes acts of interpretation even at the research stage. Second, the rules of law derive from a myriad of sources, many of which may be unfamiliar to students. Furthermore, because legal research is so important to the practice of law, the publication of legal materials has long been a profitable field. As such, there exists a long history of publishing the various sources of law. As part of the publishing history, legal sources developed their own information systems. In large part legal information systems predate the information systems most familiar to students, like the Dewey Decimal System or Library of Congress Classification. As such, the organization of legal materials tends to differ from that of other materials. Finally, the process of legal research itself tends to be different. In other fields, researchers often investigate ideas in the abstract. In the law, a researcher must always keep the specific facts of her particular client s situation in mind, as a lawyer must always apply the results of her research to her client s problem. Because legal research differs so substantially from other types of research, the American Bar Association requires that law schools specifically instruct students in legal research. 1 Typically, research instruction occurs in the context of a Legal Research & Writing (LRW) course. Schools teach legal research and writing together because the two activities (finding/applying the law and then communicating the found application) intertwine. However, legal writing falls outside the scope of this text, which focuses on the research portion of legal practice. 1 AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION, REVISED STANDARDS FOR APPROVAL OF LAW SCHOOLS, Standard 302(b) (2014).

18 17 Throwing students into the deep end by having them read cases without explanation or context and then teasing understanding out of them via the Socratic Method remains the educational method of choice for most law classes. This text will not follow that method. In fact, this text seeks to do the opposite, namely to provide enough explanation and context to demystify the art of legal research. By knowing what each of the various sources of law is, and by knowing how the various types of authority interact with each other, law students will avoid being overwhelmed by the level of detail and nuance inherent in the law and will be able to research the law in a calm, efficient manner. Thus, this text will introduce and explain the major sources of American law one at a time. As it does so, it will provide insight into how publishers arrange the sources of law. Because legal publishers originally developed their methods of organization before the advent of electronics, each source of law will be initially introduced by referencing its print form (i.e. actual law books). Once students become familiar with the sources of law and so will know for what they are looking when they research the text will proceed to explain the processes of modern legal research, which mostly involves computer-assisted research. Before introducing the sources and processes involved in legal research, however, a few words must be said about the shape and peculiarities of the United States legal system. After all, it is the unique shape of our system that gives rise to the different sources of law. Furthermore, lawyers conduct research to solve legal problems, and those problems play out in the legal system. You have to know the rules to play the game. 1.3 Federalism The United States of America employs a federal system of government. As anyone who follows American politics can tell you, federalism means different things to different people. However, the legal definition of a federal state is: A composite state in which the sovereignty of the entire state is divided between the central or federal government and the local governments of the several constituent states; a union of states in which the control of the external relations of all the member states has been surrendered to a central government so that the only state that exists for

19 18 international purposes is the one formed by the union. 2 The key point to take away from the definition is that in a federal state two separate governments share law-making power, or sovereignty, over the same territory. Of course, federal states differ from one another in precisely how the central and local governments share law-making power. To understand how the federal and state governments share sovereignty in the U.S., one must look to the historical development of federalism in America Origins of American Federalism Prior to declaring independence from Great Britain in 1776, the territory that became the initial United States of America existed as colonies, at first of England and later of Great Britain. 3 Each of the colonies operated as an entity under its own charter as a governing document according to English law. The vast distances of America (especially compared to the relatively smaller scale of England) combined with the slow speeds of pre-industrial Revolution travel to leave each colony effectively governing itself for large portions of the 17 th and 18 th centuries. 4 When the British government attempted to reassert control over the colonies in the latter half of the 18 th century, the colonies revolted and eventually won their independence. 5 Because of their history of self-rule, each revolting colony asserted its own sovereignty (thereby rejecting British sovereignty over America) both during and after the Revolution. However, in order to coordinate the war effort, each colony sent delegates to a Continental Congress during the Revolution and eventually adopted the 2 BLACK S LAW DICTIONARY 1538 (9th ed. 2009). 3 England and Scotland became joined in a personal union upon the ascension of James VI of Scotland as James I of England. They did not officially merge into the Kingdom of Great Britain until the Acts of Union of 1707: Union with Scotland Act, 1706, 6 Ann, c.11 (Eng.); Union with England Act, 1707, c.7 (Scot.). 4 See generally JACK P. GREENE, PURSUITS OF HAPPINESS: THE SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT OF EARLY MODERN BRITISH COLONIES AND THE FORMATION OF AMERICAN CULTURE (1988). 5 For the definitive account of how the increased assertion of central authority by the British Parliament led to the American Independence Movement, see BERNARD BAILYN, THE IDEOLOGICAL ORIGINS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION (enl. ed. 1992).

20 19 Articles of Confederation 6, which remained in force following British recognition of American independence. The Articles of Confederation created the United States as a confederation, which resembles a federal state only with a weaker central government and more independent local governments. 7 Sadly, it turned out that a weak central government with strong state governments did not adequately administer such a large swath of territory. In particular, the fledgling United States struggled economically. 8 Thus, less than a decade after ratifying the Articles of Confederation, the Founding Fathers reconvened to draft what became the U.S. Constitution. 9 However, even though the Founding Fathers acknowledged the need for a stronger central government, they remained wary of too strong a central power, as self-rule at the colony/state level had been the whole point of the Revolution. 10 Therefore, while the Constitution creates a strong federal government, it also specifically limits the application of federal law-making authority to specific topical competencies. 11 State governments, while subject to federal supremacy in the enumerated competencies 12, retain general sovereignty and so enjoy law-making authority over a wider range of topics. 13 Thus, the federal government possesses enumerated powers, or law-making powers specifically enumerated by the Constitution, while state governments possess reserved powers, or law-making powers over 6 ARTICLES OF CONFEDERATION OF See BLACK S LAW DICTIONARY 338 (9th ed. 2009). 8 The revolting colonies borrowed money heavily during the Revolution and so owed huge sums of money to a number of foreign powers, most notably the Dutch. 9 For a good legal discussion of the motivating factors behind the Constitution, see CALVIN H. JOHNSON, RIGHTEOUS ANGER AT THE WICKED STATES: THE MEANING OF THE FOUNDERS CONSTITUTION (2005). 10 See id. at U.S. CONST. art. I, U.S. CONST. art. VI. 13 U.S. CONST. amend. X.

21 20 everything else. 14 Please see Figure for a list of enumerated federal competencies. Enumerated Federal Power Constitutional Origin(s) of Power Taxation (partially shared with art. I, 8, cl. 1; amend. XVI states) Borrowing on Credit of U.S. art. I, 8, cl. 2 Regulating Interstate Commerce, art. I, 8, cl. 3 and Commerce with Foreign Nations or Indian Tribes Immigration & Naturalization art. I, 8, cl. 4 Bankruptcy art. I, 8, cl. 4 Coining & Regulating Value of art. I, 8, cl. 5 Money Punishing Counterfeiting art. I, 8, cl. 6 The Mail art. I, 8, cl. 7 Copyright & Patents art. I, 8, cl. 8 Creation of Federal Courts (other art. I, 8, cl. 9 than the U.S. Supreme Court) Punishing Piracy on the High Seas art. I, 8, cl. 10 & Crimes Under International Law War & Armed Forces art. I, 8, cl Creating Laws for the District of art. I, 8, cl. 17 Columbia To make all laws which shall be art. I, 8, cl. 18 necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing powers, and all other powers vested by this Constitution in the government of the United States, or in any department of officer thereof. "Figure 1.3.1: Enumerated Powers of the Federal Government 14 Please note that it is not always entirely clear whether something is enumerated or reserved, and in fact the definition of each has tended to change over time. For purposes of legal research, just be aware that you will tend to deal with more state law than federal but that federal law can trump state law on certain topics.

22 Impact of Federalism on Legal Research The way in which American federalism splits sovereignty impacts legal research in a number of ways. First, for any given territorial point in the United States, a researcher may need to look at two completely different sets of laws, as both federal law and state law will apply throughout the same territory. Sometimes a legal researcher will be able to tell at a glance whether federal or state law will govern an issue, but at other times a lawyer may need to do initial research just to determine whether to apply federal or state law (or both) to a client s problem. For example, federal law, and federal law only, clearly governs copyright 15, a fact familiar to most lawyers off the tops of their heads. However, the federal government s interstate commerce power derives from broader language 16, has expanded over time 17, and may affect areas of law typically reserved to the states. For instance, states typically define and punish crimes, such as robbery, committed inside their boundaries. 18 However, federal law also criminalizes the robbery of banks, as the federal government insures banks through the F.D.I.C. under the commerce power. 19 Thus, any given legal problem may necessitate researching multiple sets of law. Of course, American law comprises many more than two sets of law. While there is only one federal government, each of the fifty states produces its own set of law. Even 51 is too small a number to describe the sets of law contributing to the U.S. legal system. The District of Columbia possesses its own laws, as do other Federal territories. Furthermore, American Indian tribes, as Domestic Dependent Nations, enjoy a limited form of sovereignty. 20 While no legal problem will likely involve all possible sets of law in the U.S., legal researchers should remain aware of 15 U.S. CONST. art I, 8, cl U.S. CONST. art I, 8, cl See, e.g., Gibbons v. Ogden, 22 U.S. (9 Wheat.) 1 (1824); Wickard v. Filburn, 317 U.S. 111 (1942). 18 See, e.g., KY. REV. STAT (2014), available at U.S.C (Legal Information Institute through 2013 legislation). 20 American Indian law is outside the scope of this text. For a good introduction to the subject of American Indian sovereignty, see WILLIAM C. CANBY, JR., AMERICAN INDIAN LAW IN A NUTSHELL (4th ed. 2004).

23 22 the existence of multiple sets. Because most of the sets of law present in the U.S. evolved from a common ancestor (namely, the law of England), even if a jurisdiction s set of laws does not directly apply to a legal problem, it may contain pieces that help a researcher interpret a different jurisdiction s set that does apply. 21 This concept will be revisited a bit later in the discussion on hierarchy of authority in section 1.5. Federalism impacts legal research not only by providing multiple sets of laws for which researchers must account, but also by providing multiple fora for the settling of disputes about the applications of laws. In other words, in addition to worrying about the possibility of multiple sets of laws affecting their clients, lawyers need to be aware of the options presented by multiple, independent court systems operating over the same geographic area. Sometimes a client may be advantaged by trying a case in federal court as opposed to state court, or vice versa. The matter becomes more complicated when one considers the fact that a jurisdiction s court system does not necessarily always apply its own set of laws. For each controversy that comes before it, a court will determine which jurisdiction s law should apply. This is known as choice-of-law. 22 A number of factors and guiding principles determine what set of laws a court should apply, but for purposes of legal research it is important to remember that federal courts, while largely interpreting federal law, also sometimes interpret and apply state law. Similarly, while a state s court system most typically interprets the state s own laws, it will sometimes need to apply federal laws, or even the laws of another state. Choice-of-law matters to the legal researcher because some cases will involve applying bits of multiple sets of laws to the same facts. For example, a criminal defendant facing prosecution under state law may raise a federal constitutional defense. In such a case, the way the bits of law interact with each other changes depending upon which court system tries the case. Before we can cover more detail on the interaction between bits of law, however, we need to examine where those bits, or sources, of law 21 There are a few notable exceptions to the proposition that American law evolved from English Common Law. Louisiana s law derived from the French civil law system. Also, a number of states, primarily in the American Southwest, feature elements of Spanish property law, and are known as Community Property states. Finally, rather obviously, American Indian legal systems did not evolve from English law. 22 See BLACK S LAW DICTIONARY 275 (9th ed. 2009).

24 23 originate by looking at the other key feature of the U.S. Legal System: Separation of Powers. 1.4 Separation of Powers and Sources of Law At the same time that the Founding Fathers, in drafting the Constitution, limited the central government to enumerated powers, they also broke the federal government into three distinct branches. They did so in the hopes that the various branches would serve as checks and balances on each other and prevent the sort of tyranny that the former colonists rejected from the unified British government. 23 This type of government structure is called Separation of Powers, which is defined as: The division of governmental authority into three branches of government legislative, executive, and judicial each with specified duties on which neither of the other branches can encroach; a constitutional doctrine of checks and balances designed to protect the people against tyranny. 24 Subsequent to the creation of the federal government with the U.S. Constitution, each of the states in the United States adopted similar provisions in their own constitutions. Indeed, every state government in the U.S. features Separation of Powers. American government, therefore, features three distinct branches at both the state and federal levels: the legislative branch, the judicial branch, and the executive branch. In the process of governing, each of the branches contributes rules to the body of law of its jurisdiction. The term sources of law refers to the different forms the various rules take. 25. The legislative branch passes statutes, the judicial branch issues opinions, and the executive branch drafts regulations. However, a constitution underpins each of the other sources and serves as the ultimate source of law. 23 For the classic account of the Constitutional Convention of 1787, when these decisions were made, see CATHERINE DRINKER BOWEN, MIRACLE AT PHILADELPHIA: THE STORY OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION MAY TO SEPTEMBER 1787 (1966). 24 BLACK S LAW DICTIONARY 1487 (9th ed. 2009). 25 See BLACK S LAW DICTIONARY 1523 (9th ed. 2009).

25 Constitutions Scholars often describe the United States legal system as a legally positivist system. Legal positivism is a theory of jurisprudence that essentially states that all law is human-made and is only valid in a state because people accept that it is. 26 H. L. A. Hart, a twentieth century British legal philosopher, wrote perhaps the clearest articulation of legal positivism in his seminal work, The Concept of Law, which was quoted at the beginning of this chapter. Part of Hart s theory of legal positivism involves a rule of recognition, which alerts citizens of a jurisdiction to the validity of its laws. 27 For a legal rule in the U.S. to be valid, it must have been created by a process described by the applicable constitution. Thus, in the United States, the U.S. Constitution serves as the rule of recognition for the federal government. Similarly, state constitutions serve as the rules of recognition for their respective state governments. Under positivism, constitutions derive their authority from the will and acceptance of the people. Thus, for the American legal researcher constitutions represent the ultimate source of law. Of course, our constitutions do flesh out the processes by which our governments may create other sources of law. We have already seen how constitutions separate the various American governments into three distinct branches. Logically enough, the constitutions also provide each branch a method by which it can create legal rules Statutes Under the American system of Separation of Powers as described by the various constitutions, the legislative branch creates laws in the form of statutes. Generally, to create a law, a legislator will introduce a bill into whatever legislative house she belongs; then once the bill receives an affirmative vote in each legislative house and the signature of the jurisdiction s chief executive, it becomes an enacted law. 28 On the federal level, the legislative branch, known as Congress, consists of the House of Representatives and the Senate. Bills that pass both houses 26 See BLACK S LAW DICTIONARY 978 (9th ed. 2009). 27 H. L. A. HART, THE CONCEPT OF LAW (2d ed. 1994). 28 This process holds true for the federal legislature and all but one of the state legislatures. Nebraska, the odd state out, features a unicameral legislature, so bills only need pass one house in the Cornhusker State.

26 25 to become enacted receive the designation Public Laws. The Government Publishing Office (GPO) publishes all Public Laws of the United States in a multi-volume set called the Statutes at Large. The GPO also divides the Public Laws into their constituent parts by topic and fits them into a topically-organized publication of all federal laws in force called the United States Code. State legislatures follow the same process as the federal legislature, but the nomenclature varies. For instance, in Kentucky the legislature is called the General Assembly, which is comprised of the House of Representatives and the Senate. Bills that pass both houses become Acts, which researchers can find in chronological order in the Kentucky Acts or in the topically-organized Kentucky Revised Statutes. Meanwhile, bills that pass both houses of the Texas Legislature become General Laws published in the Texas General Laws before being folded into one of a number of different codes named for the topics they cover. Thus, while the processes resemble each other, each state may call its statutes by slightly different terms. 29 Because constitutions charge the legislative branches they create with general law-making ( legislative actually means law-making 30 ) ability 31, statutes represent laws in their most basic sense. As such, they are the next most important source of law after constitutions and typically control legal problems over other sources of law. Statutes will be covered in greater detail in Chapter Judicial Opinions Although a statute on point would typically control a given legal controversy, it is not always readily apparent how precisely a statute would apply to a specific set of facts, or even whether it would cover the facts at all. This ambiguity occurs because generally legislatures write statutes in broad, abstract terms in order for the statute to cover as many scenarios as possible. Thus, abstract statutes typically require interpretation in order to apply them to specific controversies. Under Separation of Powers, the judicial branch takes on the role of the interpreter of laws. 29 For a thorough list of what each state calls its statutes, see THE BLUEBOOK: A UNIFORM SYSTEM OF CITATION tbl.t.1.3 (Columbia Law review Ass n et al. eds., 19th ed. 1st prtg. 2010). 30 See BLACK S LAW DICTIONARY 910 (7th ed. 1999). 31 See, e.g., U.S. CONST. art. I, 1; KY. CONST. 29.

27 26 The judicial branch typically comprises several levels of courts, with a high court at the top, trial courts at the bottom, and one or more levels of intermediate appellate court in between, though the names of the various courts vary by jurisdiction. At the federal level, the United States Supreme Court acts as the high court, District Courts serve as the usual point of entry to the system, and Courts of Appeal (also sometimes called Circuit Courts) connect the two. 32 Constitutional grants of judicial power generally extend to the respective court system as a whole. 33 Judicial interpretations of law take the form of judicial opinions, also referred to as cases. As the casebook remains by and large the tool of choice for legal instruction in the United States, law students will tend to be most familiar with this source of law. Although subservient to the statutes they interpret, judicial opinions create their own rules of law through the force of precedent. Precedent works through the principle of stare decisis which is defined as: The doctrine of precedent, under which it is necessary for a court to follow earlier judicial decisions when the same points arise again in litigation. 34 Basically, consistency benefits law, in that it allows those governed by the law to predict what they need to do to comply with the law. Following earlier decisions as precedents leads to greater consistency. Thus, if courts begin interpreting a statute in a certain way, society benefits if they continue to interpret the same statute in the same way. Sometimes judicial opinions create legal rules through precedent even absent a statute. This happens often when courts interpret constitutional sections. It also happens when courts apply legal rules that predate the widespread use of statutes. 35 The term common law refers to law made 32 For a state-by-state breakdown of state court systems, see THE BLUEBOOK: A UNIFORM SYSTEM OF CITATION tbl.t.1.3 (Columbia Law review Ass n et al. eds., 19th ed. 1st prtg. 2010). 33 See, e.g., U.S. CONST. art. III, 1; KY. CONST BLACK S LAW DICTIONARY 1414 (7th ed. 1999). 35 The concept of the statute slowly developed in England during the late Middle Ages, but statutes did not achieve primacy until the 16 th Century. Furthermore, legislatures tended to operate on strictly part-time schedules well into the 19 th century.

28 27 through judicial opinions rather than by statutes. 36 Many common law rules remain in force in American law, particularly in the fields of Torts and Property. Thus, through the force of precedent, judicial opinions contribute legal rules to the various bodies of American law, both through statutory interpretation and common law. Indeed, many lawyers spend the majority of their research time on case research. Judicial opinions will be covered in more depth in Chapter Administrative Regulations The final branch of government formed by constitutions mandating Separation of Powers is the executive branch, which consists of a chief executive and various cabinet departments and agencies that report to the chief executive. At the federal level the President of the United States acts as the chief executive, and at the state level the Governor fills the same role. A constitution usually charges the chief executive with enforcing or executing the laws of its jurisdiction. 37 Of course, chief executives do not personally enforce all the laws of their jurisdictions. Instead, they delegate the enforcement of different areas of law to different agencies. Often, an agency will need to provide specific rules in order to enforce a broad statute. Rules issued by agencies take the form of administrative regulations. In modern times, legislatures actually delegate regulation-making authority to executive branch agencies by statute, giving regulations the force of law. While administrative regulations do contribute legal rules to the various sets of American laws, lawyers generally regard them as the weakest of the sources of law. Since regulatory authority comes via legislative delegation, a legislature can remove the authority at any time. Administrative regulations will be discussed in more detail in Chapter Hierarchy of Authority As we have seen, American law comes from many sources. Not only does each branch of government create its own source of law, but each separate jurisdiction within the U.S. possesses its own set of laws. As such, knowing how the different pieces of law interact with each other takes on 36 See BLACK S LAW DICTIONARY 270 (7th ed. 1999). 37 See, e.g., U.S. CONST. art. II, 3; KY. CONST. 81.

29 28 huge importance for legal researchers (especially if the different pieces of law in any way contradict each other, which is not an unusual occurrence). Lawyers refer to individual pieces of law as authorities and describe their relationship to each other as the hierarchy of authority. As discussed above, the standard hierarchy of authority starts with constitutions as the most authoritative, and then proceeds in order of authoritativeness through statutes, judicial opinions, and administrative regulations. However, this simple hierarchy does not capture the nuance involved when dealing with authorities from multiple jurisdictions or authorities from one jurisdiction being applied by the courts of another. Furthermore, not all judicial opinions carry equal weight. Thus, more description is in order Primary v. Secondary Authority Legal authority can be divided into two broad categories: primary authority and secondary authority. Collectively, this distinction is referred to as type of authority. Primary authority refers to authority that issues directly from a law-making body. 38 Thus, the four sources of law discussed previously make up primary authority. Secondary authority, therefore, refers to authority that explains the law but does not itself establish it, such as a treatise, annotation, or law-review article. 39 While lawyers may cite secondary authorities, courts do not view secondary authorities as possessing as much persuasive weight as primary authorities possess. More will be said on secondary authorities and their use in Chapter Mandatory v. Persuasive Authority Legal authority can also be divided into mandatory (sometimes called binding) authority and persuasive authority. Collectively, this distinction is referred to as weight of authority. Mandatory authority refers to an authority that a court considering a case must apply, while persuasive authority refers to authority that carries some weight but is not binding on a court. 40 Obviously, lawyers benefit from knowing whether a court must apply an authority to a case or whether a court may choose not to apply an authority. Therefore, being able to determine the relative weights of authority is a skill every legal researcher should aspire to acquire. 38 BLACK S LAW DICTIONARY 129 (7th ed. 1999). 39 Id. 40 Id at 128.

30 Determining Weight of Authority Determining the weight of authority for some sources of law can be quite straightforward. If a jurisdiction s constitution applies to a set of facts before a court, then the constitution acts as mandatory authority. Similarly, if a statute from the jurisdiction in question relates to the facts in controversy, a court must apply it. The same holds true for regulations, though they tend to apply to more narrowly defined sets of facts. In other words, constitutions, statutes, and regulations can never be persuasive; they are either mandatory or irrelevant. Conversely, secondary authority, since it is not actually law but merely interpretation, can never be mandatory but only acts as persuasive authority. Thus, a determination of weight for many authorities will be quick and easy. The weight of authority of judicial opinions, however, depends on several factors. In order to make a determination, first a lawyer must consider choice of law. In order to be binding, a precedent must apply the same jurisdiction s laws as would apply to the controversy for which the research is being conducted. 41 However, choice of law alone does not determine weight of authority. A lawyer must also consider venue, or the court where her controversy would be heard if it went to trial. In order to be mandatory, an earlier case must have been issued from the same court system as will be adjudicating the controversy to which a lawyer would like to apply the precedent. Furthermore, the earlier case must be from a higher court, in a direct line of appeal, from the current controversy s venue. As state court structures vary, let us look at a hypothetical case in the federal court structure as an example. As discussed above, the federal court structure consists of trial level courts (District Courts), intermediate appellate courts (Courts of Appeals), and ultimately, the United States Supreme Court. District Courts and Courts of Appeals are grouped into twelve geographic circuits (and one topical circuit). If a lawyer loses a trial in a District Court, she may appeal to the Court of Appeals for whichever geographic circuit contains the District Court that tried her case. See Figure for a list of which circuits contain which districts. 41 Note that in the event a controversy involves issues from multiple sets of laws, such as federal constitutional defenses to state laws, it would be possible for cases to be binding on some issues but not others.

31 30 Federal Circuit Corresponding District Courts by State in which they Reside First Circuit ME, NH, MA, RI, Puerto Rico Second Circuit NY, VT, CT Third Circuit PA, NJ, DE, Virgin Islands Fourth Circuit MD, VA, WV, NC, SC Fifth Circuit TX, LA, MS Sixth Circuit TN, KY, OH, MI Seventh Circuit IN, IL, WI Eighth Circuit MN, IA, MO, AR, ND, SD, NE Ninth Circuit CA, AZ, NV, ID, OR, WA, MT, AK, HI, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands Tenth Circuit UT, WY, CO, NM, KS, OK Eleventh Circuit* AL*, GA*, FL* D.C. Circuit D.C. The Federal Circuit certain appeals determined by subject matter Figure 1.5.3: The Federal Judicial Circuits * The Eleventh Circuit split from the Fifth Circuit on October 1, Therefore Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals decisions prior to that date are binding upon District Courts in the Eleventh Circuit. If a lawyer were trying a case applying federal law in the District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky, mandatory precedents would include opinions from the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals and the United States Supreme Court. Because cases from the Eastern District of Kentucky may only be appealed to the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, opinions from other circuits Courts of Appeals would merely be persuasive, even though those courts are higher courts. Similarly, if the same lawyer were handling the appeal from the District case in the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, only Supreme Court cases would be mandatory, as the Supreme Court is the only court higher than a Court of Appeals in the federal system. To complicate matters, however, an exception exists if the choice of law and venue do not match, i.e. a case in federal court involves state law, or a case in state court is applying federal law or the law of another state as a choice of law. In this specific case, the court applying a different

32 31 jurisdiction s law will treat opinions from the high court of that jurisdiction as mandatory. This is because each jurisdiction s high court acts as the final arbiter of its laws under constitutional principles of federalism. Of course, even if a lawyer determines a precedent only serves as persuasive authority, she may still choose to use it, particularly if it features facts similar to her controversy. Furthermore, some cases may be more persuasive than others. Generally speaking, the higher the court the better. Also, cases from the court system of the jurisdiction whose law has been selected as the choice of law tend to be better than cases from other court systems. Finally, although they are not binding because they may technically be overturned, earlier cases from the same court hearing the current controversy would be the highest level of persuasive authority as courts generally try to avoid overturning their earlier decisions. Although not always an easy task, the evaluation of the hierarchy of authority for a given legal problem is an essential skill for legal researchers to determine what research paths to pursue. Furthermore, a legal researcher needs to be able to recognize the various sources of law that create the rules that govern the problem being researched. For these reasons, legal researchers should keep the structures of the U.S. Legal System firmly in mind as they research.

33 Concluding Exercises for Chapter 1 Try your hand at putting legal authorities into hierarchical order! For each of the following fact patterns, put the authorities listed into order from the most authoritative to the least authoritative. Draw a line at the point above which all authorities are mandatory and below which all authorities are persuasive Introductory Hierarchy of Authority Exercise You represent Old Tobias Tobacco Company. Recently, a start-up guerrilla marketing firm operating on Old Tobias s behalf may have inadvertently violated federal law. Apparently, the guerrillas started a campaign whereby they were encouraging Facebook users to change their profile pictures to an Old Tobias print ad from the 1950s, an ad which runs afoul of current laws, and now the feds are preparing to file suit in the Middle District of North Carolina (where Old Tobias is headquartered). As a result, you did a little research into the matter. Please rank the authorities you found according to weight and hierarchy of authority: FDA v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., 529 U.S. 120 (2000). [United States Supreme Court Case] Robert J. Baehr, A New Wave of Paternalistic Tobacco Regulation, 95 Iowa L. Rev (2010). [Scholarly Article About Tobacco Regulation] 15 U.S.C (2006). [Federal Statute] R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. v. Seattle-King County Dept. of Health, 473 F. Supp. 2d 1105 (W.D. Wash. 2007). [Federal District Court Case] R.J. Reynolds v. Phillip Morris, 199 F. Supp. 2d 362 (M.D.N.C. 2002). [Federal District Court Case] Lorillard Tobacco Co. v. Reilly, 533 U.S. 525 (2001). [United States Supreme Court Case] Consolidated Cigar Corp. v. Reilly, 218 F.3d 30 (1st Cir. 2001). [Federal Court of Appeals Case] Brown & Williamson v. FDA, 153 F.3d 155 (4th Cir. 1998). [Federal Court of Appeals Case]

34 Intermediate Hierarchy of Authority Exercise Dear Associates: We are representing Ronny Jotten in an upcoming drug possession case in Fayette County Circuit Court in Lexington, KY. Jotten is a graduate student living in university housing. He has his own bedroom but shares a kitchen and common room with three other students. On the morning of August 23 rd, Lexington police officers, while looking for Vic Sydney, a known acquaintance of Jotten, entered Jotten s suite without a warrant. The police limited themselves to the common areas and did not enter a bedroom. All residents were away from the flat at the time. However, Mac Shane, an undergraduate living next door to Jotten, entered the flat looking for Jotten. The police, who in the meantime had found a rather large bag of marijuana in between some couch cushions, asked Shane if he knew whose it was. Shane, inebriated at the time and wanting to deflect attention away from that fact, replied that the marijuana was Ronny s before waltzing out the door. The police subsequently arrested Jotten. I m pretty sure that what the police did was an unlawful search under federal law, but I m going to need to prove that Jotten had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the common area (as opposed to dormroom) of his suite. Here are some authorities on the matter. Please put the following materials into hierarchical order. Please draw a line between binding and persuasive authority. Thanks. As a reminder, we re arguing federal law in state court. Regards, Ms. Partner United States v. Villegas, 495 F.3d 761 (7th Cir. 2007) Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. 347 (1967) Adams v. Commonwealth, 931 S.W.2d 465 (Ky. Ct. App. 1996) Minnesota v. Olson, 495 U.S. 91 (1990) Blades v. Commonwealth, 339 S.W.3d 450 (Ky. 2011) U.S. Const. amend. IV

35 34 8 Ky. Prac. Crim. Prac. & Proc. 18:11 (part of the Kentucky Practice legal encyclopedia set) United States v. Carriger, 541 F.2d 545 (6th Cir. 1976) City of Athens v. Wolf, 313 N.E.2d 405 (Ohio 1974)

36 Advanced Hierarchy of Authority Exercise You are a staff attorney for Heaven s Doorkeepers, a non-profit legal aid organization devoted to defending death penalty cases in the state of Texas. Your most recent case is that of J.W. Harding, who has been charged with capital murder under Tex. Penal Code ANN (West 2011). The charges stem from an incident in which Mr. Harding broke into a barn on The Freewheelin Ranch owned by one Robert Dillon. Mr. Harding proceeded to steal roughly a dozen cattle from the barn. As he was looking for some kind of way out of there, Mr. Harding, driving the small herd of cattle, encountered Mr. Dillon approaching on foot along Highway 61. Mr. Harding prompted the cattle to stampede in an attempt to escape, and the herd trampled Mr. Dillon to death. To make matters worse for Mr. Harding, Mr. Dillon s next of kin, his son Jacob, is suing Mr. Harding for wrongful death. Jacob Dillon resides in Nashville, TN, in a condo with a great view of the skyline. As such, he is suing Mr. Harding in federal court on diversity jurisdiction. Since Heaven s Doorkeepers is representing Mr. Harding anyway, your supervising attorney has decided to help with the wrongful death suit as well. She is assigning you to explore each of the following legal issues: capital murder as a matter of state law in Texas courts, cruel and unusual punishment as a matter of federal law applied in Texas state courts, and wrongful death civil actions as a matter of Texas state law as applied in federal courts. Please put the following sources into hierarchical order for each issue. Label each source as mandatory or persuasive. Bear in mind that Texas has two Supreme Courts, the Texas Supreme Court (Tex.) handles civil cases, and the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (Tex. Crim. App.) deals with criminal cases. Capital Murder (state law) in Texas Young v. Commonwealth, 50 S.W.3d 435 (Ky. 2001) Tex. Penal Code ANN (West 2011) Texas v. Cobb, 532 U.S. 162 (2001) Patrick S. Metze, Death and Texas: The Unevolved Model of Decency, 90 Neb. L. Rev. 240 (2011)

37 36 Bible v. State, 162 S.W.3d 234 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005) Kennedy v. State, 338 S.W.3d 84 (Tex. App. 2011) Paredes v. Thaler, 617 F.3d 315 (5th Cir. 2010) Devoe v. State, 354 S.W.3d 457 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011) Cruel and Unusual Punishment (Federal Issue in Texas state courts) Lawrence Rosenthal, Originalism in Practice, 87 Ind. L. J (2012) Gonzalez v. State, 353 S.W.3d 826 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011) Stringer v. Black, 503 U.S. 222 (1992) U.S. v. Fogg, 666 F.3d. 13 (1st Cir. 2011) Garcia v. Texas, 131 S.Ct (U.S. 2011) Turpin v. Commonwealth, 350 S.W.3d 444 (Ky. 2011) Sama v. Hannigan, 669 F.3d 585 (5th Cir. 2012) U.S. Const. amend. VIII Wrongful Death Civil Action (Texas state law in Federal Court, specifically in the M.D. Tenn) Ruiz v. Guerra, 293 S.W.3d 706 (Tex. App. 2009) Wichita Falls State Hosp. v. Taylor, 106 S.W.3d 692 (Tex. 2003) Wackman v. Rubsamen, 602 F.3d 391 (5th Cir. 2010) Austin Nursing Center, Inc. v. Lovato, 171 S.W.3d 845 (Tex. 2005) Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann (West 2011) Fry v. Lamb Rental Tools, Inc., 275 F.Supp. 283 (W.D. La. 1967) Detroit Crude Oil v. Grable, 94 F. 73 (6th Cir. 1899) Bunt v. Sierra Butte Gold Min. Co., 138 U.S. 483 (1891)

38 Recommended CALI Lessons for Further Practice CALI hosts an impressive number of interactive lessons on its website. The following lessons on the legal system of the United States touch upon material covered in this chapter. They would be a great place to start for students looking for further practice on the concepts introduced in this chapter! Where Does Law Come From? by Diane Murley Summary: an overview of the branches of the U.S. government and how they make law Lesson ID: LCS04 URL: Legal Research 101: The Tools of the Trade by Sheri H. Lewis Summary: an introduction to basic resources for researching the law Lesson ID: LWR08 URL:

39 38 Chapter 2 Constitutions & Statutes Thus, the particular phraseology of the Constitution of the United States confirms and strengthens the principle, supposed to be essential to all written Constitutions, that a law repugnant to the Constitution is void, and that courts, as well as other departments, are bound by that instrument. John Marshall, Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. 137, 180 (1803) All those courts before mentioned are in use, and exercised as Law at this day, concerning the Sheriffes Law dayes and Leets, and the offices of High Constables, pettie-constables, and Tithingmen; howbeit, with some further additions by Statute laws - Francis Bacon, The Elements of the Common Lawes of England 2.1 Learning Objectives for Chapter 2 In working through this chapter, students should strive to be able to: Compare the different stages in a statute s life-cycle. Evaluate the properties of a code: o o code organization code annotations Use finding aids to find specific statutes in print: o o o by citation by topic using the index by popular name Recognize the various types of document comprising a statute s legislative history and evaluate how useful each type would be for determining legislative intent.

40 Constitutions & Statutes As discussed in Chapter 1, constitutions act as the highest source of law in the United States legal system. No other law can be valid if it conflicts with a constitutional provision. As such, finding applicable constitutional sections takes on dire importance for legal researchers. Fortunately, constitutions tend to be short. Furthermore, because of their importance, most experienced lawyers will know whether or not a constitutional issue will likely apply without needing to do an overly large amount of research. Because of these factors, and because jurisdictions tend to publish their constitutions in the same place as their statutes, we will cover constitutions and statutes together. Constitutionally valid statutes act as the second highest source of law in the United States legal system. An applicable statute will control a given legal problem over case-made legal rules. This has been the case in the Anglo legal tradition since the late Middle Ages, as the quote from Francis Bacon at the beginning of this chapter suggests. However, the full primacy of statutes did not occur until the Tudor period in the Sixteenth Century. 42 In fact, at that time England underwent the Reformation and split from the Roman Catholic Church by statute. 43 As the development of statutory authority occurred before the founding of the North American colonies, statutes have always enjoyed primacy (subject to written constitutions, an American innovation) in the U.S. legal system. This is not to say that statutes have always taken the same form. American political and legal institutions have evolved over time. However, we will not cover the complete history of statutory forms since what matters to most researchers is finding and understanding relevant statutes in their current forms. To understand the different forms statutes currently take, however, we must first turn our attention to the life-cycle of a statute. 42 For an account of how Henry VIII and his secretary Thomas Cromwell modernized English political and legal institutions, see generally G. R. ELTON, THE TUDOR REVOLUTION IN GOVERNMENT; ADMINISTRATIVE CHANGES IN THE REIGN OF HENRY VIII (1953). 43 Ecclesiastical Appeals Act, 1532, 24 Henry 8, c. 12 (Eng.).

41 Life Cycle of a Statute Statutes, of course, come from legislatures. When a legislator wants to create a new statute, he introduces a bill into whichever house he belongs. Upon introduction, each bill receives a number beginning with a designation of its house of origin. For example, at the federal level, bills introduced into the House of Representatives begin with the letters H.R., while bills introduced in the Senate begin with the letter S. State legislatures follow similar schemes. Bill numbering starts over each legislative session, so researchers need to be aware of which session of a legislature considered a bill. However, bills are not yet statutes, and many never become so. Thus, while a legal researcher may occasionally look up a bill s legislative history 44 in an attempt to determine legislative intent, statutory research by and large uses other versions of statutes. Upon passing both houses of a legislature, 45 a bill becomes a statute. Different jurisdictions call their statutes by different names, but Acts or Laws are the most commonly used terms. At the federal level, passed bills become known as Public Laws. 46 Public Laws receive a unique number, beginning with the number of the Congressional session in which the law was passed. The Government Publishing Office then immediately publishes each Public Law as a pamphlet or slip law. Slip laws, due to their quick publication, effectively give the public notice of new laws. However, because each slip law contains only one statute in isolation, they are not terribly useful for legal research purposes. In fact, many states do not bother to issue slip laws. At the conclusion of each legislative session, the printer for the legislature gathers all statutes passed during the session and publishes them in chronological order as part of a multi-volume set, known as a collection of session laws. At the federal level, the Statutes at Large act as the session laws. Different states call their session laws different things. For instance 44 Legislative history refers to everything that happened to a statute in the legislature before it became a statute. See BLACK S LAW DICTIONARY 983 (9 th ed. 2009). 45 Except, of course, in unicameral Nebraska. 46 For a complete list of what each state calls its statutes, see THE BLUEBOOK: A UNIFORM SYSTEM OF CITATION tbl.t.1.3 (Columbia Law review Ass n et al. eds., 19th ed. 1st prtg. 2010).

42 41 Kentucky s session laws are the Kentucky Acts, while Ohio s session laws are the Ohio Laws. 47 Because session laws feature chronological organization, a legal researcher pursuing a specific topic will not find them terribly useful. However, if a researcher has already found a specific statute and wishes to see earlier versions of that statute, session laws become a valuable resource, as we will see in section Figure 2.3: Life Cycle of a Generic Statute Finally, after initial publication, statutes undergo codification, which is: The process of compiling, arranging, and systematizing the laws of a given jurisdiction, or of a discrete branch of the law, into an ordered code. 48 The process of codification thus results in a topically-organized code of statutes in force. The federal government appropriately titles its code The United States Code (U.S.C.). Naturally, as befits the U.S. federal system, 47 For a complete list of what each state calls its session laws, see THE BLUEBOOK: A UNIFORM SYSTEM OF CITATION tbl.t.1.3 (Columbia Law review Ass n et al. eds., 19th ed. 1st prtg. 2010). 48 BLACK S LAW DICTIONARY 294 (9th ed. 2009).

43 42 state codes vary in name. 49 Note that when a new statute makes changes to the existing statutory code, language is added or removed to the code as necessary to incorporate those changes. Thus, codes constantly change, while session laws serve as repositories of historical laws. Because most legal research involves investigating legal issues that apply to facts, rather than beginning with a specific statute, codes tend to be the statutory source researchers use most often. A jurisdiction s code also typically includes its constitution at the front, so constitutional research would also be conducted with a code. 2.4 Using Codes Lawyers conduct the bulk of their statutory research using the codified versions of statutes. Thus, legal researchers need the ability to use codes efficiently. Because codes and their tools developed during the precomputer era, we will introduce their use in print format. Of course, electronic legal publishers include codes on their research platforms, but rather than reinvent the wheel, the electronic publishers incorporated many of the tools originally developed for codes in hard-copy. Also, many expert legal researchers prefer codes in print due to the efficient design of these resources. Thus, we will introduce the use of codes in print here and save methods of electronic research for Chapter Codes & Topical Organization Codes work well for legal research because of their topical organization. A topical organization allows for the easy creation of a topical index, which researchers can use to find code provisions on a specific topic. Once a researcher finds a code provision on point, nearby provisions may also be likely to be of use because of the way codes group like topics together. In order to see how this works, let us take a closer look at the organization of a typical code. 50 The most basic unit of a code is the section, which provides for a specific legal rule over a set of circumstances. While sections may feature subsections, the subsections themselves only provide for part of the legal rule created by the section and so cannot really act on their own. Think of code sections as analogous to atoms. While protons, neutrons, and 49 For a complete list of what each state calls its code, see THE BLUEBOOK: A UNIFORM SYSTEM OF CITATION tbl.t.1.3 (Columbia Law review Ass n et al. eds., 19th ed. 1st prtg. 2010). 50 As with most authorities in a federal system, exact nomenclature may vary jurisdiction by jurisdiction.

44 43 electrons make up atoms, none of those particles will be found in nature on their own, but only clumped together in atoms. Subsections and code sections work in the same way. Codes then group related sections together into chapters. Sometimes a code will also use sub-chapters if an area of law contains a sufficient level of depth for multiple classifications. For instance, in the United States Code, Chapter 10 of Title 18 contains all of the code sections related to federal criminalization of biological weapons. The individual sections in the chapter address discreet topics such as the prohibition of biological weapons or seizure of biological weapons by the government. 51 Note also the inclusion of a definitions section in the chapter. 52 The definitions contained therein apply to all the other sections in the chapter. A researcher would need to find the definitions in order to apply correctly any of the other sections in the chapter. Luckily, a code s inherent organization makes such a discovery likely. Furthermore, print codes feature a table of contents at the beginning of each chapter to enable researchers to grasp quickly the organization of that particular chapter. Figure 2.4.1a: The table of contents for Chapter 10 of Title 18 of the United States Code Annotated. Codes then group related chapters together into titles. Generally, a title acts as the largest unit of organization in a code, other than the code itself. 53 For example, the U.S.C. houses the chapter on biological weapons in Title U.S.C (2012) U.S.C. 178 (2012). 53 Sometimes codes also group related chapters into separate parts within a title. Note also that some jurisdictions, notably Texas and California, publish multiple topical codes instead of one unified code. To determine the publication format for a specific jurisdiction, see THE BLUEBOOK: A UNIFORM SYSTEM OF CITATION tbl.t.1.3 (Columbia Law review Ass n et al. eds., 19th ed. 1st prtg. 2010).

45 44 with other chapters dealing with different crimes. A table of contents alerts researchers as to what chapters are included in the title. Sometimes titles include definitions or general principles that apply throughout the title. These will usually be found towards the beginning of the title. Similarly, a code itself features a table of contents identifying its constituent titles, and may also feature general provisions applicable to the entire code. A lawyer would need to find these in order to interpret applicable laws correctly. Fortunately, codes provide enough organization to allow researchers to find the information they need. Figure 2.4.1b: The table of contents for Title 18 of the United States Code Annotated.

46 Annotations Sometimes a jurisdiction publishes its own code as an official version, such as the U.S.C. Often, however, a jurisdiction will designate private entities as the publisher(s) of its code. For instance, in Kentucky two separate private publishers produce the Kentucky Revised Statutes: Michie s (Lexis) and Baldwin s (West). Even for jurisdictions that publish their own code, though, private publishers will also publish an unofficial version. For example, West publishes the United States Code Annotated (U.S.C.A.), and LexisNexis publishes the United States Code Service (U.S.C.S.). Both of these titles are reprints of the official U.S.C., yet their respective publishers are able to sell copies and turn profits because they add value to the code by providing editorial content called annotations. Annotations lead researchers who have discovered a relevant statute in an annotated code to other authorities that help interpret that statute. Through annotations, researchers may discover cases, secondary sources on point, or other tools useful to the expansion of research from an applicable statute. Figure shows examples of annotations included for a section from West s Hawai i Revised Statutes Annotated. Annotated codes also feature annotations for constitutional sections. 54 The publishers of annotated codes employ lawyers as editors to read new legal authorities and to identify which authorities interpret which specific statutes. Obviously, this is a time-intensive and expensive undertaking, but legal researchers willingly pay the costs because good annotations are an efficient way to begin their research Note that publishers usually provide an extremely large number of annotations for constitutional provisions. This makes sense as constitutional provisions tend to be broadly-written and open to much interpretation through caselaw. The result for the researcher, though, is that annotations for a particular constitutional provision may be extremely bulky and not as easy to use as those for statutes. 55 Also, because the different publishers employ different editors, it may sometimes be beneficial to check multiple versions of a code (if a researcher has cost-effective access to multiple versions) as the annotations may differ.

47 46 Figure 2.4.2: HAW. REV. STAT. ANN (West 2008) Using Codes in Print Many expert legal researchers find print copies of codes more efficient to use than electronic copies. Often a researcher will need several related sections of a code and so desires the ability to flip back and forth between sections. Also, sometimes seeing a code in print makes it easier to grasp the code s inherent organization. Naturally, when researching in print good legal researchers prefer annotated codes to unannotated codes because of the value added by the annotations Finding Code Sections by Citation Before a legal researcher can use annotations, however, he must find the code section(s) relevant to his problem. The easiest way to pull a relevant

48 47 code section is by citation. A lawyer might know the citation of a code section he needs through other means than research. For instance, a criminal defense attorney may know the citation to the statute under which his client has been charged. If a legal researcher knows the citation of a particular code section, then retrieving that section is simple. Citation schemes vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, but generally speaking, statutory citation begins with a number that references the title in which the section is found, then provides an abbreviation that lets researchers know which code the citation references, and finishes with the specific section number of the section. The federal code follows this format, as do the codes of some states. For example, to pull 7 U.S.C. 1471(j), 56 a researcher would find the volume of the U.S.C. that contains Title 7 and turn to 1471(j). As you can see in figure 2.4.2, codes feature a header on each page that alert researchers to the first (for lefthand pages) or last (for righthand pages) section that appears on that page. Note that code volumes sometimes contain more than one title. This bears emphasizing: title numbers and volume numbers of print codes do not correspond. A title is a unit of intellectual organization, while a volume is a unit of physical organization. Researchers should take care to select the correct volume that houses the title for which they are looking. Not all states follow the federal citation scheme. For instance, in Hawai i code sections are cited in the following format: HAW. REV. STAT The citation still features an abbreviation referencing a specific code (in this case, the Hawai i Revised Statutes), but there is no title number. Instead, the citation provides only the specific section number: For each section in the Hawai i code, the digits before the hyphen refer to a chapter, and the ones after the hyphen refer to the specific section. Thus, a researcher would find in chapter 322 of the Hawai i Revised Statutes. Hawai i serves as only one example, though many states employ a similar scheme. For a complete state-by-state breakdown of citation schema, researchers may consult table 1.3 of The Bluebook Note that for full, formal citation when producing legal writing, more information would be required. See THE BLUEBOOK: A UNIFORM SYSTEM OF CITATION R. 12, (Columbia Law review Ass n et al. eds., 19th ed. 1st prtg. 2010). 57 THE BLUEBOOK: A UNIFORM SYSTEM OF CITATION tbl.t.1.3 (Columbia Law review Ass n et al. eds., 19th ed. 1st prtg. 2010).

49 Finding Code Sections by Topic While retrieving a code section by citation is quick and easy, often legal researchers will not know the citation of code sections they will need. Instead, from talking with a client, they will merely have identified some relevant legal issues and will need to find statutes that correspond with those issues. Luckily, print codes provide a couple of methods of accessing information by topic. Furthermore, because the methods resemble similar methods used by other non-fiction publications, most law students already possess at least some familiarity with them. First, codes provide a table of contents. Actually, they usually provide a series of tables of contents. At the very beginning of the code, a researcher can find an exhaustive table of contents that lists each title of the code and gives information about what areas of law each respective title covers. 58 Then, at the beginning of each title, a code provides a table of contents for that title, detailing the coverage of chapters within the title. Similarly, individual chapters provide tables of contents with information on their constituent sections. See figures 2.4.1a and 2.4.1b above as examples. Researchers can browse through the tables of contents to narrow in on a specific section of relevance. Browsing tables of contents, however, can be time-intensive and does require some knowledge of how specific issues relate to general topics. For instance, a researcher looking for criminal trespass statutes would need to know that those would likely be included near burglary and that burglary as a crime would be found in a penal code. Often, then, researchers turn to the other tool provided by codes for topical research: the index. Generally speaking, researchers will find a comprehensive index in one or more volumes located at the end of a code. A code s index works in typical index fashion: researchers look up specific terms they think apply to their situation, and the index refers them to specific code sections or to other terms in the index (that will then refer the researcher to specific code sections). Note that legal indexes tend to be organized into multiple levels of classification, meaning that sometimes researchers can only find specific terms by looking under general topics. For instance, a researcher looking for a statute governing who will bear the cost of abating a nuisance in Hawai i would first need to look up nuisance as a topic and then scan 58 Often, the overall table of contents will be reproduced at the front of each individual volume of a code.

50 49 through the subtopics to find abatement and ultimately costs related to abatement. Often, the multiple-level organization of code indexes even leads researchers to investigate relevant terms that they would not have thought of on their own! Between the index and the table of contents, legal researchers should be able to find statutes on any given topic, even without knowing a citation beforehand. Figure : Excerpt from the General Index of West s Hawai i Revised Statutes Annotated Popular Names Table & Other Tables In addition to providing means for researchers to find codes sections by topic, codes often provide finding aids that allow a legal researcher to find a code section if he possesses some other piece of information about a statute. For instance, most laws receive popular names, by which they can be referenced without needing to rattle off a difficult-to-remember citation. For example the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (otherwise known as Public Law No ) tends to make the news a lot. A lawyer might remember that the Religious Freedom Restoration Act applies to his case but then need to pull the relevant code sections to read the actual statute. By using the Popular Names Table of the U.S.C.A., he would be able to look up Religious Freedom Restoration Act and retrieve citations to the code sections which house the act, as seen in Figure

51 50 Figure : The U.S.C.A. Popular Names Table Entry for the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. Note that the Popular Names Table also provides researchers with citations to the enacting and amending session laws. Annotated codes also often provide separate tables that convert code section citations to session law citations and vice versa. Any other table provided by a code would work under similar principles as a Popular Names Table Using Code Sections Regardless of how a researcher finds a relevant code section, he then needs to apply it to his client s problem. The first thing a good researcher does upon locating a potentially relevant code section is to read carefully the language of the law itself. (Note that annotated codes provide much more information than just the law itself. Please refer back to Figure for an illustration of the different pieces of information discussed here.) Reading the code section should alert the researcher as to whether or not the code section he found actually applies to his legal problem. After an initial read, a lawyer should then check to see if the language he just read was in force at the time of the actions that gave rise to his client s problem. He does this by perusing the dates enacted/amended that codes include immediately after the language of each section. Obviously, the earliest date listed refers to the enactment of the law, while later dates refer to times later statutes amended the code section. The text of the code section reflects the changes made by the most recent listed amending

52 51 statute. Therefore, if a client s problem occurred prior to the most recent amendment, a lawyer would need to look at the version of the law in force at that time. Luckily, the dates amended following a code section also provide citations to the session laws that did the amending. The lawyer could then retrieve the appropriate session law by citation, as if he were retrieving a code section by citation, to obtain the law as written at the time of the facts giving rise to his client s problem. However, looking backwards in time at changes to a code section when researching in print is not enough. A legal researcher must also look forwards in time, or update the law. This occurs because books are printed at a definite point in time. Because legislatures frequently pass statutes that amend code sections, invariably some printed code sections will have changed since the date when the volume they are found in was last published. Fortunately, legal publishers are aware of this possibility and have developed a system to alert researchers to changes in the law. They simply issue supplementary volumes containing the new language. Most annotated codes publish their supplementary updates as pocket parts, which are soft-bound pamphlets which dedicated library workers slide into a pocket at the back of the bound code volume. If enough laws change to the point that a pocket part becomes too thick to fit into a code volume comfortably, a publisher may issue a free-standing supplement (which would be located immediately to the right of its code volume on the shelf), or may simply republish the code volume in question. Pocket parts present code sections in the same order as their parent volume, but they do not reprint every section of the volume. If a code section does not appear in the pocket-part, then a researcher knows that it has not been updated through the publication date of that pocket part and can rely on the version found in the code volume proper. However, if a code section does appear in the pocket-part, then a researcher knows one of two things: either the text of the law has changed, or the publisher has seen fit to add more annotations to the particular section. If the law has changed, the new text of the code section will be provided in the pocketpart, and the researcher should use that language. If the text of the section itself does not appear, then the section appears in the pocket part because only the annotations have changed. Note that if a new section is added to a code after publication of its volume, it will appear only in the pocket part. See figure for an illustration of the two different types of pocket part entries.

53 52 Figure : Sample Pocket-Part Entries. Reprinted from LexisNexis with permission. Copyright 2015 Matthew

54 53 Bender & Company, Inc., a LexisNexis company. All rights reserved. Once a researcher knows that the text of a statute was current at the time of his client s incident, a good researcher then takes a couple of more steps before moving on with his research. First, he will flip to the beginning of the chapter or sub-chapter that houses the section to see if any definitions, general provisions, or related sections apply to his issue. Second, he will make note of any annotations included for her section of interest. The annotations may help him interpret or apply the statute he has found. They will also usually give him an entry point into case research, which we will cover in Chapter Local Legislation In addition to creating their own laws, state legislatures also often delegate law-making authority to cities or other local government units within the state. Cities and other local units which have been delegated law-making power by the state are often referred to as municipalities or localities. Individual municipalities create their own processes of legislation in accordance with the state statute(s) creating the municipality. Lawyers refer to local legislation as ordinances rather than statutes. The major difference between a state statute and a municipal ordinance comes in applicability. A statute carries force of law throughout the state. Conversely, a municipal ordinance carries force of law only inside the boundaries of its municipality. Another major difference between statutes and ordinances becomes obvious when one compares the publications that house the respective sources of law. While municipal ordinances do tend to be organized topically into codes, the actual publication of physical copies remains less than regular. A couple of commercial publishers publish larger municipalities codes, 59 but often the codes of smaller municipalities exist only as self-created and promulgated documents. In fact, ordinance codes can be somewhat hard to find. Researchers sometimes may need to contact the issuing municipal government directly to find an up-to-date copy. 59 Municode and American Legal Publishing dominate the ordinance-publishing business such as it is. The codes of ordinances published by these two companies do not feature annotations, as both companies generally operate on a lowoverhead model.

55 54 Should a legal researcher get his hands on a municipal code of ordinances, he would interact with it in the same ways he would interact with other codes, as municipal codes typically feature indexes, tables of contents, and good topical organization. Ordinance research is often easier than that involving other codes as a matter of scale, since municipal codes often comprise only a single volume. Though municipal ordinances can be difficult to find and carry only limited applicability, they do carry the force of law in their municipalities through legislative delegation of authority. As such, lawyers need to be able to find ordinances affecting their clients, as they would statutes. Of course, both statutes and ordinances are subject to interpretation, as are constitutions. 2.6 Interpreting Constitutions and Statutes As mentioned above, both constitutions and statutes tend to be broadly written in order to apply to a wide range of facts. They often lack specifics, and so lawyers must interpret them and how they will apply to a given set of facts. Often, lawyers look to judicial opinions that have already interpreted a statute for guidance on how to interpret that statute. We will cover finding judicial opinions in Chapter 3. However, occasionally a lawyer may encounter a statute that has not yet been interpreted by a court, and so may need to look for other sources to aid in interpretation. Similarly, a lawyer may face a situation in which all the judicial opinions side against his client and may be looking for an alternative way to interpret a statute or constitutional provision. In these situations, lawyers sometimes try to argue for an interpretation for an authority based on the intent of the body that created the authority in question. In order to support an intent-based argument, a lawyer will often look to the history of the authority s creation for evidence of intent Constitutional History & Framers Intent Constitutions typically come from constitutional conventions, which tend to publish records of their work beyond the constitution itself. Furthermore, to become binding as the ultimate source of law for a jurisdiction, that jurisdiction must ratify the constitution. Usually, some form of a jurisdiction s legislature performs the ratification. Under some circumstances, researchers can look to the work product of the constitutional convention or of a ratifying body to help interpret a constitutional provision by attempting to determine the intent of the drafters or framers of the constitution.

56 55 For a variety of reasons, most lawyers will never find themselves needing to look to framers intent. Most of the commonly-litigated constitutional provisions feature a significant number of cases interpreting them. Usually, lawyers prefer to rely on a reported case s interpretation than to infer intent from the work product of a constitutional convention. Still, students may sometimes encounter references to framers intent in judicial opinions or scholarly works, so we will briefly introduce the major sources here. The federal constitution came about as the result of a constitutional convention held in Philadelphia during the summer of In addition to producing the Constitution itself, the convention produced various bits of work product. The bits of work product were later collected by historians and published as compilations. The most comprehensive and widespread of the compilations is Max Farrand s The Records of the Federal Convention of Following the convention, the Constitution faced a tough ratification campaign, which saw three of the convention delegates 62 publish a series of essays arguing for ratification. Collectively those essays form the Federalist Papers, 63 and judges deem them good expressions of framer intent. Furthermore, a historian named Jonathan Elliot collected documentation from the ratification debates that took place in the various state ratification conventions and published them in a work entitled The Debates in the Several State Conventions on the Adoption of the Federal Constitution (or Elliott s Debates for short). 64 Together, these three works make researching federal framers intent relatively straight-forward, and researchers may find all three titles on the Library of Congress s website (as well as in virtually every library system in the United States). State constitutions often feature similar documentations of history in terms of convention proceedings, but the availability of the proceedings may vary by state. Furthermore, many states have adopted different 60 See CATHERINE DRINKER BOWEN, MIRACLE AT PHILADELPHIA: THE STORY OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION, MAY TO SEPTEMBER, 1787 (1966). 61 MAX FARRAND, THE RECORDS OF THE FEDERAL CONVENTION OF 1789 (1911). 62 Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay. 63 THE FEDERALIST Nos (Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay). 64 JONATHAN ELLIOT, THE DEBATES IN THE SEVERAL STATE CONVENTIONS ON THE ADOPTION OF THE FEDERAL CONSTITUTION AS RECOMMENDED BY THE GENERAL CONVENTION IN PHILADELPHIA IN 1787 (1861).

57 56 constitutions at different times, and so there may be more than one convention s proceedings available. To research state constitutional history, a researcher should contact a reference librarian in his state of interest. A complicating factor about constitutions is that, because they are designed to be organic documents, they change over time through the amending process. If the constitutional issue being researched relates to one of the amendments, neither convention nor ratification documents will be of use to a researcher. Fortunately, though, the vast majority of constitutional amendments pass through a more rigorous version of the legislative process, and so their histories can be researched in similar methods to the legislative history of statutes, which we will cover in the next section Legislative History & Legislative Intent A statute s legislative history can serve as a source that will aid in interpreting the statute. Legislative history refers to the background and events leading to the enactment of a statute. 65 Essentially, everything that happens to a proposed statute procedurally goes into its legislative history. Lawyers can sometimes use the legislative history to investigate the legislature s intent in drafting the statute. A lawyer would then argue that the legislative intent indicates a particular interpretation of the statute. As the exploration of legislative intent is usually the end goal of researching legislative history, researchers will find some pieces of legislative history more helpful than others. After all, the legislative process typically involves several distinct steps in two separate houses, so finding something that indicates the intent of the legislature as a whole can be challenging. We will briefly introduce the types of documents researchers of legislative history are likely to encounter in order from those generally the most helpful for inferring intent to those less often used Types of Legislative History Documents In order to appraise the relative weight of a piece of legislative history, a researcher needs to understand the basic legislative process. First, a legislator introduces a draft statute as a bill. Upon introduction of the bill, the leadership of the legislative house in which the bill was introduced assigns it to a relevant committee of that house for evaluation. The 65 BLACK S LAW DICTIONARY 983 (9th ed. 2009).

58 57 committee will look at the bill in some detail and may hold hearings to investigate the bill s purpose or commission studies about specific effects the bill may have. If the committee passes the bill, it returns to the full legislative house for debate and consideration. After a bill passes one house, it will be introduced in the other legislative house to follow the same process. 66 Because bills are subject to amendment at pretty much any time of the process, it is unlikely that a bill will pass each house with the exact same language intact. To resolve differing language, legislatures generally form special committees with members from both houses, called Conference Committees. Once a Conference Committee agrees on a reconciled version, each house must pass the final, reconciled version of the bills they have already passed. Only then will the bill be sent to the executive to be signed into law as a statute. 67 Given that legislatures contain multiple legislators all with their own beliefs and motives that can affect the steps of the process, speaking of legislative intent as a singular force may strike one as somewhat specious. In essence, every piece of legislation passed represents a compromise. Therefore, the intent expressed during the compromise stage of the process will be the strongest expression of intent a researcher will be able to find. For this reason, researchers of legislative history often look to Conference Committee materials first. Indeed, Conference Committee Reports detailing the actions taken by the Conference Committee on a particular statute usually provide the strongest expression of legislative intent. 68 Sadly, Conference Committees do not create reports for every statute they consider, and not every statute requires a Conference Committee. Therefore, a researcher may or may not find a Conference Committee 66 Note that legislative procedures vary and also tend to be flexible. For instance, sometimes different, or even identical, versions of a bill may be introduced simultaneously in both houses. If they both pass, the legislature then can combine them instead of starting the process anew. 67 Note that the executive possesses the options of not signing or vetoing the bill, in which case it would not become a statute, barring a veto override. 68 Note that intent-inferring value does vary document by document. A researcher may find a Conference Committee Report that offers little interpretive value for a particular statute, while a different legislative history document for the same bill contains an express statement of intent. Generally speaking, though, a Conference Committee Report containing evidence of intent would be more persuasive than other documents, since the Conference Committee will have dealt most closely with what became the final version of the statute.

59 58 report for a given statute. If no Conference Committee Report is available, she should then try a Committee Report from one of the standing committees. Because the committee to which a bill is assigned looks at a bill more closely than the legislative house at large, the committee itself often expresses intent in recommending the bill to the rest of the legislative house. Furthermore, legislatures such as Congress tend to have their own procedural rules requiring that standing committees be made up of members of both parties. As such, Committee Reports generally reflect the views of both the majority and minority parties on the committee and so may provide insight into the compromise that best embodies intent. However, because the committee will have considered an earlier, preconference version of a bill, researchers should ensure that any discussion of intent in a Committee Report refers to a portion of the bill that remained in the bill as it passed into law. Researchers may also encounter statutes for which there are no Committee Reports available from any legislative committee. Other pieces of legislative history may still provide glimpses of legislative intent. At the Federal level, Congress publishes a journal of its proceedings called the Congressional Record, which often preserves transcripts of debates on particular bills, as well as voting records on the same bills. By putting these two pieces of information together, a researcher might be able to determine which argument carried the day and then ascribe intent to that argument. Alternatively, a researcher might find multiple versions of a bill along with suggested amendments and attempt to infer intent from the changes made to the bill. Finally, a researcher may examine published Hearings or Committee Prints (studies commissioned by the committee considering a bill) in order to see what information Congress considered before passing a bill or to see what the stated purpose of a bill was. While it is somewhat tenuous to infer intent from Hearings or Prints, they may be able to show whether or not Congress considered a specific issue and may also describe the legislation s general goal in the abstract. Note that all of the legislative documents described in this paragraph requires inference and assumption in order to determine intent as it applies to the specific language of a statute. As such, these materials are much weaker than Committee Reports.

60 59 Type of Legislative History Document Conference Committee Report Committee Report Congressional Record/Legislative Journal Hearings Committee Prints Signing Statement Brief Description Official report of the committee which reconciles differences between the bills passed by each house Official report of whatever committee reviewed initial bill Official journal of the legislature which may contain records of debates or statements regarding a bill Transcripts of hearings held by legislative committees studying particular bills Published reports on an issue commissioned by legislative committees studying particular bills Statement issued by the executive when signing bill into law Figure Types of Legislative History Documents Utility for Determining Intent High often contains express intent as related to the version of the bill that actually becomes a statute Medium contains views of both parties and may contain express intent, though not usually as related to the final version of the bill Low may contain express statements of intent, but statements only attributable to individual(s) making statements; inference required to attribute to legislature at large Very low will show an issue was brought to the legislature s attention but intent about specific statutory language difficult to infer Very low will show an issue was brought to the legislature s attention but intent about specific statutory language difficult to infer Very low not actually from legislature

61 60 In addition to the documents produced by the legislator, researchers of legislative history may sometimes also encounter signing statements. In order for a bill to become law, it not only must be passed by the legislature but must also generally receive the signature of the executive. When the executive signs a bill, she sometimes issues a signing statement, which is an expression of the executive s understanding of legislative intent behind the new law. While this may seem like a strong, express statement of intent, note that it does not, in fact, come from the legislature. As such, it is not as good for a legislative intent argument as something actually produced by the legislature. Researchers of federal legislative history will encounter the types of materials described above somewhat regularly. However, states vary in the amount of legislative work product they publish. In fact, many states publish only a legislative journal and no reports of any sort. Therefore, before engaging in research of state legislative history, students should contact reference librarians from their state to determine what actually is available. Before a researcher can use legislative history to determine intent, she must first find what legislative history exists for the statute in question, so let us now turn to methods for finding legislative history documents Finding Legislative History Documents We have good news and bad news about researching legislative history. On the bad news side, a researcher never knows whether a legislature will have produced any legislative history documents for a given statute. Thus, researching a statute s legislative history may sometimes prove fruitless. On the good news side, because a researcher will typically be looking for legislative history to help interpret a statute, she will have a logical starting point to her research. The statute itself will naturally limit the scope of her research. In order to conduct legislative history research on a statute, a researcher will need the session law or slip law citation for the statute in question. As discussed above, researchers typically find statutes via a topically organized code. The reason that codes do not work so well for legislative history is that most statutes produced by a legislature get divided into pieces in order to fit topically into the code. However, when the legislature considered and ultimately passed the statute, all the topical bits would have been considered together. Therefore, researchers will need the version of the

62 61 statute as it passed in order to pull all its associated legislative history documents. Luckily, the code itself provides citations to the session laws that enacted or amended a code section at the end of each code section. Once a researcher has obtained the citation information for the slip law or session law version of a statute, she can proceed in a couple of ways. First, she may find a compiled legislative history for her statute. Compiled legislative histories are similar to the compilations of historical constitutional documentation referenced in Section Compiled legislative histories may exist as stand-alone works on a single topic, 69 but researchers may also find works that collect and publish multiple compiled legislative histories. Such collections at least for Federal legislation--exist both in print and electronically. 70 The dominant print source for compiled legislative histories is West s United States Code Congressional and Administrative News (USCCAN). Before computers, USCCAN was the easiest way to locate federal legislative history. 71 Researchers would look up federal statutes by Public Law number, and the USCCAN entry for the Public Law in question would contain a selection of the more useful legislative history documents as chosen by a West editor. Note that USCCAN only provides select (as opposed to comprehensive) legislative histories and only on select statutes. Despite these limitations, USCCAN is useful and ubiquitous enough that it remains the Bluebook preferred source for many citations to legislative history. 72 In addition to finding them in print, researchers can also find compiled legislative histories electronically. For instance, West includes an electronic 69 See, e.g., BERNARD D. REAMS AND CHARLES R. HAWORTH, CONGRESS AND THE COURTS: A LEGISLATIVE HISTORY, : DOCUMENTS AND MATERIALS REGARDING THE CREATION, STRUCTURE, AND ORGANIZATION OF FEDERAL COURTS AND THE FEDERAL JUDICIARY (1978). 70 For a comprehensive bibliography of available compiled legislative histories, see NANCY P. JOHNSON, SOURCES OF COMPILED LEGISLATIVE HISTORIES: A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF GOVERNMENT DOCUMENTS, PERIODICAL ARTICLES, AND BOOKS (2d ed. 2012). 71 Note that in addition to its print form, USCCAN is now also published electronically on WestlawNext. It remains a trusted and useful source for legislative history research in the computer era. 72 See THE BLUEBOOK: A UNIFORM SYSTEM OF CITATION R. 13.4, at 129, R 12.6, at 118, (Columbia Law Review Ass n et al. eds., 19th ed. 2010).

63 62 version of USCCAN on its WestlawNext platform. Similarly, HeinOnline provides a number of compiled legislative histories in electronic format. More information on using electronic research platforms will be provided in Chapter 5. Unfortunately, compiled histories are not available for every statute. In the event that a researcher needs to investigate the legislative history of a statute without an available compiled history, she will need to compile the materials herself. The amount, type, and format of legislative documents available vary greatly by jurisdiction. At the Federal level, the Government Publishing Office produces a large selection of legislative documents that researchers can find in print or on microfiche 73 at a Federal Depository Library. 74 Legislative history documents for more recent statutes may also be found online at Congress.gov. 75 Alternatively, the private publisher ProQuest provides digitized Congressional documents from as early as 1789 through electronic subscription services. 76 We will cover conducting electronic research in Chapter 5. State governments tend to publish significantly fewer legislative documents than the federal government, but the specific publication schemes vary by jurisdiction. To conduct legislative history research on a state statute, we encourage students to contact a law librarian in the relevant state. The legislative history documents described in this section can aid lawyers in interpreting statutes, the source of law created by the legislative branch. In the next chapter, we will turn our attention to another source of law: judicial opinions, which themselves often interpret statutes. 73 In the event that students find themselves needing to consult microfiche or microfilm, just ask a reference librarian for help. 74 The GPO maintains a list of libraries participating in the Federal Depository Library Program at 75 Congress.gov includes finding aids for legislative documents from 1973 onwards that would make finding them in a Federal Depository Library easier, but only contains the full-text of documents from 1993 onwards. 76 ProQuest s subscription databases, such as Legislative Insight, are marketed mostly to research universities. The libraries of major public universities typically allow on-site use of subscription databases.

64 Concluding Exercises for Chapter 2 Now that we have covered the basics of using codes for research, let s try to do some actual legal research! The following exercises contemplate the use of print codes. Because most states tend to enact laws on similar topics, if you do not have access to a print code of any of the jurisdictions called for in these exercises, you may simply substitute the code of a jurisdiction for which you do have print access Introductory Exercise on Code Research You are an associate at a mid-size law firm in Cincinnati. Your managing partner comes to you to say that a client, an extremely wealthy woman who inherited an alcohol-distribution company, stopped in to request that the firm initiate divorce proceedings on her behalf. Apparently, her significantly-older husband has become increasingly cantankerous and erratic following some failed political ambitions. In your client s own words, he s just become too much of a maverick. Upon being asked in which state the matrimonial residence was located, the client confessed that the couple often spend time apart but rotate monthly to dwellings in the following locales: Kahului, Hawaii Sedona, Arizona Key West, Florida Arlington, Virginia You have been tasked with finding statutory grounds for divorce in each of the jurisdictions listed. Please find the relevant code sections.

65 Intermediate Exercise on Code Research Dear Associates: We have recently been engaged by Bernard Brown, proprietor of Brown Books, to defend him in a misdemeanor prosecution in the state of Georgia. Brown Books is located in suburban Atlanta and carries a variety of new and used books. Recently, Mr. Brown sold a number of copies of D.H. Lawrence s Lady Chatterly s Lover to students at the local high school, who ranged in age from 14 to 16 years of age. Some of their parents got upset and the State of Georgia charged Mr. Brown with selling harmful materials to minors. This despite the fact that according to Mr. Brown (who emigrated from Ireland), the bloody school assigned the bloody book! It s art! It s literature! The school library has a copy for the love of God! Above all, Mr. Brown would like us to get an acquittal. I need you to: Find the statute provision that prohibits the sale of harmful or obscene materials to minors. Does the Georgia code define harmful materials? See if there is anything in the code that provides special protection for libraries. Do you think we will be able to defend Mr. Brown successfully? Thanks, Mr. Partner

66 Advanced Exercise on Code Research Hello Team: We have been retained to represent Mr. Tyler Sangman in his upcoming federal criminal trial in the Northern District of Ohio. Mr. Sangman, a professional lobbyist and environmental activist, stands charged with the federal crime of committing an attack to plunder a vessel. The vessel in question, the S.S. Umlaut, was carrying replacement parts across Lake Erie for a chemical plant operated in western New York by industrial giant BADCO, Inc. Mr. Sangman allegedly used an inflatable motorboat to intercept the Umlaut off the coast of Ohio in order to disable its propeller system with plastic explosives. Unfortunately, the explosives were more powerful than intended, and the Umlaut sank to the bottom of Lake Erie. Using the United States Code Annotated, I need you to find the following information: Look up the federal code section criminalizing attacking vessels to plunder them under the piracy laws of the U.S. Would Sangman s alleged actions qualify as a crime under the text of this code section? Look at the annotations. Do any suggest a case that might answer whether it matters that Sangman didn t intend to profit from his actions? Do any annotations indicate whether we would be able to challenge federal jurisdiction over the crime, since the action occurred in waters adjoining Ohio? I know you ll need to read the cases from the annotations for a definitive answer, but just going from the statute and its annotations, do you think we ll have good news or bad news for Mr. Sangman? Thanks, Mr. Partner

67 Recommended CALI Lessons for Further Practice CALI hosts an impressive number of interactive lessons on its website. The following lessons on constitutions, statutes, and codes touch upon material covered in this chapter. They would be a great place to start for students looking for further practice on the concepts introduced in this chapter! How to Research American Constitutional Law by Brian Huddleston Summary: an overview of researching federal and state constitutional law; contains references to materials that we cover in Chapters 3, 5, and 6, as well as what we covered here in Chapter 2 Lesson ID: LR113 URL: Introduction to State and Federal Statutes by Mary Rumsey and Suzanne Thorpe Summary: a review of the different forms of publication statutes take Lesson ID: LWR15 URL: Forms of Federal Statutory Publication by Elizabeth G. Adelman and Kristina L. Niedringhaus Summary: a review of the four publication forms of federal statutes Lesson ID: LWR30 URL: Codification by Bill Taylor and Tina S. Ching Summary: an in-depth look at the code form of publication of statutes Lesson ID: LWR 16 URL:

68 Finding Statutes by Kit Kreilick Summary: a review of the methods by which researchers find statutes; includes print methods covered in this chapter as well as electronic methods covered in Chapter 5 Lesson ID: LR23 URL: Updating Federal and State Statutes by Rebecca S. Trammell and Ashley Krenelka Chase Summary: an overview of the processes by which researchers ensure that discovered statutes are up to date and still valid; also discusses electronic methods of updating statutes discussed in Chapter 5 Lesson ID: LWR 24 URL: Researching Federal Legislative History by Nancy P. Johnson Summary: an introduction to the federal legislative process and the various congressional documents in a legislative history. Students will be introduced to free legislative databases on the Internet. Through various cases, students will see how the courts use congressional documents to interpret laws. Lesson ID: LWR14 URL:

69 68 Chapter 3 Judicial Opinions & Common Law The law embodies the story of a nation s development through many centuries, and it cannot be dealt with as if it contained only the axioms and corollaries of a book of mathematics. In order to know what it is, we must know what it has been, and what it tends to become. Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., The Common Law It is a maxim among these lawyers, that whatever hath been done before, may legally be done again: and therefore they take special care to record all the decisions formerly made against common justice and the general reason of mankind. Jonathan Swift, Gulliver s Travels 3.1 Learning Objectives for Chapter 3 In working through this chapter, students should strive to be able to: Appreciate how judicial opinions create legal rules through precedent. Evaluate judicial opinions varying weight of precedential authority. Use reporters to look up opinions by citation. Evaluate the editorial content added to opinions by publishers of reporters. Explain how the West Key Number/Digest System functions. Use digests and reporters in combination to reconstruct the common law on a given subject.

70 Judicial Opinions and the Common Law As discussed in Chapter 1, both constitutional and statutory provisions generally consist of language too broad to be applied to specific facts without an act of interpretation. In the U.S. legal system, the judiciary serves as the primary interpreter of the law. Courts issue their interpretations as judicial opinions, which then act as precedent to create lasting legal rules. Sometimes (maybe even most of the time) lawyers will refer to opinions as cases. However opinion is a more precise term, as a single case can feature more than one opinion. Multiple opinion cases occur when not all the judges 77 hearing a case agree on the result. If a majority of judges agree, they will designate one of their members to issue a majority opinion, which is the strongest form of judicial precedent. If an individual judge disagrees with the majority opinion, she may issue a dissenting opinion. Similarly, if an individual judge agrees with the end result of a case, but not the legal reasoning that led to the result, she may issue a concurring opinion. Both dissenting opinions and concurring opinions may be cited as persuasive precedent, but neither will be as strong a precedent as a majority opinion. To further complicate matters, judges may join the opinions of their colleagues. In fact, the way a researcher can tell that a majority opinion is a majority opinion (other than by the fact it comes first in the write-up), is by seeing that a majority of the judges have joined it. Judges may also join dissents or concurrences instead of issuing their own. Furthermore, judges sometimes only join parts of an opinion, if they only agree with certain issues. After all the judicial maneuvering is said and done, sometimes a court will be left without a majority opinion but will have to issue a plurality opinion instead. Plurality opinions act as much weaker precedent than majority opinions. Thus, when a legal researcher finds a relevant opinion, she should pay attention as to its origins. Once issued, judicial opinions act as precedent for later courts, thus opinions provide their own legal rules that become part of American law. Lawyers call such judge-made rules common law. Common law can develop from a statute or constitutional provision by creating a standard interpretation of the same, or it can develop independently of constitutions and statutes. Miranda Rights serve as an example of the 77 Courts very as to whether they style their members as judge or as justice. For purposes of this chapter, judge will be used throughout.

71 70 former. The Fifth Amendment, in rather broad language, guarantees people accused of crimes the right of due process. 78 Miranda v. Arizona, a U.S. Supreme Court case, interpreted due process as requiring police to inform a suspect in custody of her constitutional rights before interrogating her. 79 Later cases applied that ruling as precedent and developed the law further by discussing what exactly qualifies as custody or interrogation. 80 Thus, judicial opinions have created specific legal rules as a common law of the Fifth Amendment. Judge-made rules also exist independently of constitutional or statutory interpretation. Typically, these rules became articulated by judges prior to the widespread use of statutes. Most such rules were part of the body of English law that American colonists originally brought with them from the Old Country. Indeed, common law can also be used to refer only to the traditional, customary laws that developed in England. 81 Many English common law elements still persist in American law, especially in the fields of Torts and Property. Regardless of whether working on problems of statutory interpretation or application of historic common law rules, legal researchers tend to spend much of their time conducting case-based research. Researching judicial opinions tends to take more time than researching codes, as cases tend to be longer than statutes and also do not benefit from the inherent organization provided by the process of codification. Let us thus turn to how one goes about researching cases. As with statutes, the information systems for publishing judicial opinions came about before the advent of computers. When the legal publishers began providing electronic content in the latter part of the twentieth century, they imported the already-extant information systems to the new format. Thus, as we did with statutes, we will here introduce judicial opinions in their print format and will save electronic research for Chapter U.S. CONST. amend. V. 79 Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966). 80 See, e.g., Maryland v. Shatzer, 559 U.S. 98 (2010); Rhode Island v. Innis, 446 U.S. 291 (1980). 81 For the multiple meanings of common law, see BLACK S LAW DICTIONARY (9th ed. 2009).

72 Case Reporters The practice of republishing judicial opinions for dissemination and use has existed since medieval times. 82 However, prior to modern times, only select cases on pre-identified topics tended to be published. 83 Also, reports of opinions that were published tended to focus on limited geographic areas, leaving lawyers with far fewer precedents with which to work. The modern system of publishing judicial opinions began in the late nineteenth century when John B. West systematically collected appellate-level opinions and published them in multi-volume sets he termed reporters. West Publishing continues to publish the dominant amount of American caselaw to this day, and West s reporters continue to see use Types of Reporters West, and to a lesser extent its competitors 84, produce several broad types of reporters. Simplest are jurisdictional reporters, which publish reported cases from a single jurisdiction. For instance, West s Kentucky Decisions includes reported opinions from Kentucky state courts. Sometimes, the publisher limits the scope of jurisdictional reporters to opinions from a specific judicial level, as West does with its various reporters for federal cases. The Supreme Court Reporter, for example, republishes opinions only from the United States Supreme Court. Likewise, the Federal Reporter publishes opinions from federal Courts of Appeal, and the Federal Supplement publishes select cases from U.S. District Courts. 85 Some jurisdictions publish their own opinions in official reporters, the most notable being the United States Reports containing opinions issued by the Supreme Court of the United States and published by the Government 82 See, e.g., HENRICI BRACTON, DE LEGIBUS ET CONSUETUDINIBUS ANGLIAE (c. 1260). 83 The official United States Reports was an exception to this trend, as it has always included every Supreme Court opinion issued. 84 Because the term lion s share does not even begin to do justice to West s dominance of publishing judicial opinions, most of the discussion in this chapter will focus on West publications. 85 Note that not all district court opinions are published. Trial level opinions, because they mix application of law with finding of facts, do not make as good a precedent as appellate opinions. Therefore, West only includes particularly significant district court opinions in the Federal Supplement. West also publishes the Federal Appendix which includes cases originally passed over for publication. Opinions in the Federal Appendix do not count as fully published opinions, per se, and so legal researchers should not rely on them as precedent.

73 72 Publishing Office. Official reporters generally work similarly to West s jurisdictional reporters although without the helpful editorial material that West provides. 86 In addition to jurisdictional reporters, West also publishes reporters that gather opinions from several different states into one series, called regional reporters. Please note that regional reporters exist as a publishing contrivance only. Therefore, just because two states judicial opinions appear in the same reporter, it does not mean that the opinions are in any way related. For instance, cases from Kentucky and cases from Texas both appear in the South Western Reporter, but opinions from Kentucky would carry no more weight in Texas than opinions from Maine, which are found in the Atlantic Reporter, would. 86 Similar to statutes, researchers often find West s unofficial reporters to be more useful than official reporters, due to the extra editorial content.

74 73 Figure 3.3.1: A Map of West s Regional Reporter System Beyond regional reporters, another instance exists in which legal researchers might find cases from multiple jurisdictions within a single reporter set. Sometimes publishers will create topical reporters, which gather opinions from all U.S. jurisdictions that touch upon the reporter s central theme. For instance, West publishes the Education Law Reporter, which contains a variety of state and federal cases dealing with issues of law as applied to the education profession. Note that legal researchers may often find the same judicial opinion in any number of reporters. For instance, a case dealing with education law from the Kentucky Court of Appeals could probably be found in the Kentucky Decisions, the South Wester Reporter, or the Education Law Reporter. Nothing about the opinion changes from reporter to reporter. In other words, it does not matter where a legal researcher finds a needed precedent, just that she does so.

75 Finding an Opinion in a Reporter As with statutes and codes, a legal researcher most easily retrieves an opinion from a reporter if she has a citation in hand. Unlike codes, however, reporters do not impose a topical organization upon the legal authorities they contain. Instead, reporters publish opinions in chronological order as courts hand them down. Therefore, obtaining a citation to a case takes on paramount importance. Luckily, before engaging in case research, a good legal researcher will have checked for controlling statutes and made note of key case citations found in a relevant statute s annotations, so it is not unusual to begin case research with a citation in hand. Case citation works very similarly to code citation. A citation to a case begins with a number, proceeds to an abbreviation, and then ends with another number. The first number in a case citation refers to the volume of the reporter in which the case appears. The abbreviation alerts researchers as to which reporter contains the case 87, and the final number signifies the page of the reporter volume on which the case begins. For example, Rose v. Giamatti, 721 F.Supp. 906 (S.D. Ohio 1989) begins on page 906 of volume 721 of the Federal Supplement. Often, the first number of a case will be immediately followed by a comma and a second page number. The second page number acts as a pin-cite referring the reader to the specific page of the case on which the issue being cited is discussed. Going straight to a pin-cite may save a researcher time, though the whole case should be read for context, of course. 87 See Figure for a list of abbreviations to common reporters.

76 75 Abbreviation Reporter Cases Contained U.S. United States Reports U.S. Supreme Court (official version) S. Ct. Supreme Court Reporter U.S. Supreme Court (West version) L. Ed. Supreme Court Reporter, Lawyer s Edition U.S. Supreme Court (LexisNexis version) F. Federal Reporter federal Courts of Appeals F. Supp. Federal Supplement federal District Courts So. Southern Reporter state courts from LA, MS, AL, FL P. Pacific Reporter state courts from AK, HI, CA, OR, WA, ID, NV, AZ, UT, MT, WY, CO, NM, KS, OK S.W. South Western Reporter state courts from TX, AR, MO, KY, TN A. Atlantic Reporter state courts from ME, VT, NH, RI, CT, NJ, DE, MD, DC, PA N.E. North Eastern Reporter state courts from IL, IN, OH, NY, MA N.W. North Western Reporter state courts from ND, SD, NE, MN, IA, WI, MI S.E. South Eastern Reporter State courts from WV, VA, NC, SC, GA Figure 3.3.2: Commonly Used Reporters Note that when we speak of citations, we speak of them as referring to cases, not opinions. This is because all opinions issued in a case are published together as one unit in the reporter. Typically, however, a citation to a case will be alluding to the majority (or plurality, if that is the case) opinion of the court unless it specifically identifies a concurrence or dissent. A couple of other unique circumstances affecting case citation bear mentioning. First, sometimes cases appear in more than one reporter.

77 76 Thus, a legal researcher may encounter parallel citation, in which one case citation refers to multiple reporters. In this case, the researcher may pull the desired case from whichever of the referenced reporters strikes her as most convenient. Second, because book spines feature limited space, when a reporter set reaches 999 volumes, rather than try to squeeze an extra digit onto the spine, the publisher starts the numbering over. To avoid confusion when this happens, the reporter enters its second series (or third series in the case of an exhausted second series). Citations to reporter series other than the first include a notation to that effect next to the abbreviation of the reporter title. For example, F.2d refers to the second series of the Federal Reporter. Thus, citations truly make it easy for researchers to pull cases from reporters Using a Reported Case Once a legal researcher locates a case in a reporter, she will, of course, be able to read all opinions issued in the case. However, reading full cases can be a time-consuming process. To increase the efficiency of legal research, West includes valuable editorial content for cases in its reporters, much as publishers of annotated codes do. 88 Figure illustrates the editorial content provided by a West reporter. The first thing to note about a reported case (as lawyers call cases that appear in reporters) is that the actual judicial opinion does not start right away. In fact, the opinion will sometimes not start for pages! This happens because West places its editorial content before the opinions. This information is often introductory and allows the researcher to more quickly parse the content of the actual opinion. 88 Note that the editorial content merely helps explain or interpret the case; it does not itself act as precedent. As such, lawyers never cite to editorial content but rather use it to understand and cite the case it accompanies.

78 77 Figure 3.3.3: A Case as it Appears in a West Reporter The first bit of information a reported case gives to a researcher comes in the heading of the case. The heading includes the case name, the name of the court that heard the case, the docket number assigned by the court, and any relevant procedural history for the case. A short synopsis of the case,

79 78 including the holding of the majority opinion, immediately follows the heading. Thus, before reading an entire opinion, a legal researcher can make an advance determination as to its worth by scanning the heading and synopsis. After the synopsis, West provides the most useful of the editorial content included in reporters: headnotes. Headnotes identify specific legal issues addressed in the opinion(s) of the case. Thus, a researcher can tell at a quick glance whether the issues she wants were considered in a case. Furthermore, West includes notes within the text of the opinion(s) indicating where in the opinion(s) the court considered the specific issues described by the headnotes. In addition to helping the researcher identify legal issues within an opinion, West s headnotes provide the ability to find other cases that discuss the same issue. West assigns a topic and key number to every headnote its editors create. Each key number refers to a specific legal issue found in the jurisprudence of its accompanying topic. Different judicial opinions that discuss the same issue will all receive the same corresponding topic and key number. To find other cases with the same topic and key number, a legal researcher turns to the other major type of West publication for case research: the digest, which we will discuss in section Unreported Cases & Court Dockets Not all cases heard in the United States make it into a reporter. Cases will be passed over for inclusion in a reporter for a variety of reasons. First, cases from trial-level state courts tend to focus more on findings of fact rather than on determinations of law, and so are usually not published. 89 Second, sometimes a judge, even at the appellate level, will indicate in an opinion that it is not for publication. She may do this if the case breaks no new ground legally and so adds nothing to the precedents on which it was decided. Alternatively, the facts in the case may be unique or bizarre enough that the judge thinks creating a precedent from the case might cause havoc with other precedents. Whatever the reason behind not being included in a reporter, though, lawyers deem opinions issued in unreported cases to be unpublished and do not view them as having full precedential value. Note that West s Federal Appendix reports cases that were originally passed up for 89 The same holds true for some federal district court cases, though West publishes federal district opinions that do make determinations of law in the Federal Supplement as discussed above in section

80 79 publication in West s other reporters. As such, researchers should view cases from the Federal Appendix as unreported, and should view their opinions as unpublished, to be used only with extreme caution. In fact, until relatively recently, courts only allowed citation to unpublished opinions in very limited circumstances. However, with the advent of computer-assisted legal research (which will be discussed in Chapter 5), unpublished opinions have become somewhat easier to find. As a result, in 2006, the Supreme Court of the United States adopted a rule permitting the citation of unpublished federal opinions in federal courts, provided that the unpublished opinions were issued in 2007 or later. 90 Most states now make similar provisions, though the exact details vary. Researchers should check the court rules of their jurisdiction before using an unpublished opinion to ensure doing so is permissible. The reason that courts traditionally treated unpublished opinions with skepticism derives from the difficulty in finding unpublished opinions prior to the electronic research era. Because the primary way of finding precedent in print was through the use of the reporter and digest system, any case not included in a reporter would have been overlooked by the majority of researchers. 91 In fact, prior to the computer age, the primary way of obtaining an unpublished opinion was to retrieve it from the court docket at the court that heard the case. Court dockets are records kept by the court of proceedings in a particular case. For the legal researcher, dockets can be a treasure trove of information because they typically note all the documents, or court filings, submitted by parties or produced by the court related to that case. In addition to the final opinion, a researcher may be able to see the briefs (written arguments) submitted by both parties, the motions they made in court, exhibits presented, court orders on motions, any final court orders regarding the proceedings, and more. An enterprising researcher can explore other uses for dockets beyond gathering more information about an individual case. She can use dockets to find examples of motions, arguments, and other documents related to a particular legal issue and use them to inform her own legal documents. If 90 Fed. R. App. P Cases appearing in the Federal Appendix can be found via a print digest, but these represent a very small percentage of the unpublished cases out there and do not, of course, include any state cases.

81 80 a case involves a corporation, sometimes it must reveal information to the court that they otherwise would never disclose to the public. A researcher could potentially use documents submitted to the court to find out about financial issues within the company, confidential information regarding patents, or other useful information. Nowadays many courts provide online access to their more recent dockets, and researchers can generally find court filings electronically using the major legal research platforms discussed in Chapter 5. However, some states do not put their dockets online, or sometimes a researcher may wish to look at a docket that predates electronic filing. In order to obtain materials from a docket unavailable electronically, a researcher should contact the clerk of the court that heard the case in question. Generally speaking, though, published opinions are much more valuable to a legal researcher than unpublished opinions or court filings. Let us now turn to the tool that allowed lawyers to find published opinions on particular topics prior to the invention of computers: the digest. 3.4 Digests Digests, though themselves large multi-volume sets, act as topical indexes to the even more voluminous reporter sets. Remember, reporters themselves lack topical organization the lengthy nature of judicial opinions would make any such internal organization highly impractical and instead work with the external organization provided by digests. Likewise, digests do not reproduce judicial opinion, but provide short summaries of cases and citations to the same organized by topic. Thus, both reporters and digests are of limited use without the other Types of Digests For the most part, West publishes the same types of digests as it does reporters, though there are some key differences in coverage between the two types of publication. Like reporters, digests come in jurisdictional, regional, and topical varieties. Additionally, West publishes general digests that can potentially lead researchers to opinions issued in any jurisdiction in the U.S. 92 Note, however, that a digest can also be used effectively with an electronic database of cases. The basic steps would be the same except that instead of pulling a case from a reporter, the researcher would retrieve the case by entering its citation into a legal search engine.

82 81 Legal researchers probably use jurisdictional digests more than any other type. West publishes jurisdictional digests for most individual states and the District of Columbia. 93 State digests, unlike state reporters, include references to both state cases and related federal cases that originated in the state in question. In addition to individual state digests, West publishes a number of federal digests. Some, like the Supreme Court Digest, index cases from a single court. However, the Federal Practice Digest leads researchers to published opinions issued by any federal court, regardless of level. West also publishes several regional digests that mostly correspond to the regional reporters. Note, however, that not every regional reporter benefits from a companion regional digest. 94 Regional digests lead researchers to opinions issued by state courts for the same states covered by the corresponding reporter. As West publishes topical reporters, so too does it publish topical digests to accompany the reporters. For example, lawyers working for a university might consult the Education Law Digest in combination with the Education Law Reporter. In addition to the types of digests corresponding to types of reporter, West publishes the General Digest, which can potentially lead researchers to opinions from any U.S. jurisdiction. Because of the sheer amount of information involved in such an undertaking, West periodically publishes the Decenniel Digest. 95 When a new edition of the Decenniel Digest appears, the General Digest then starts anew. Thus, if depending on a one-stopshop approach to researching with digests, lawyers must consult both the Decenniel and General Digests West does not publish a digest for Delaware, Nevada, or Utah. To find opinions from these jurisdictions using only print sources, researchers would need to consult the relevant regional digest or the general digest. 94 West never published a digest for the South Western Reporter. Furthermore, West has discontinued the North Eastern Digest and the Southern Digest. Researchers in jurisdictions covered by those regions would need to consult the relevant state digest or the general digest in order to find opinions using print sources. 95 Although the period between publications of the Decenniel Digest used to be 10 years, as suggested by the title, in modern times of heavy case loads, West now publishes it more often. 96 Indeed, they should probably consult the Centenniel Digest, which predates the Decenniel Digest, as well.

83 82 Fortunately, all of West s digests use the same system, the topic and key number system. Thus, once an aspiring legal researcher learns to use one digest, she will be able to use all of them Using Digests to Find Opinions As discussed above in section 3.3.3, West editors assign a topic and key number to every headnote they create upon reading cases. Each key number corresponds to a specific issue within its topic, and judicial opinions that discuss the same issue will feature the same topic and key number. Please note that each topic in the system begins with key number 1. In other words, West reuses numbers, so knowing key numbers without knowing the corresponding topics does researchers little good. If, however, a legal researcher knows the topic and key number that correspond to the issue for which she is looking, she can simply look up the topic and key number in a digest and retrieve a list of cases that have considered the issue in question in the jurisdiction(s) covered by that digest. Furthermore, the digest provides brief summaries of each case so that the researcher can make an informed decision as to which cases she wants to pull from their respective reporters first. Figure 3.4.2a provides an example of a typical digest entry. As a caveat, many West digests have started over in new series, much like the West reporters. For instance, the Kentucky Digest 2d continues the Kentucky Digest. Similarly, the Federal Practice Digest is now onto its 5th series. 97 The key fact to remember about digest series is that they are not cumulative. Therefore, in order to find judicial opinions from the whole range of years available, a researcher must consult all the various series of a particular digest. West publishes an editorial note at the beginning of each volume of a digest providing researchers with notice of the year-range covered by that particular series of the digest. 97 The Federal Practice Digest 5th is actually the sixth series of the title, as the original Federal Practice Digest replaced the precursor Federal Digest.

84 83 Figure 3.4.2a: Sample Entry from the Federal Practice Digest 5th Digests act as a powerful tool for finding judicial opinions, but to use them a legal researcher must know the topic and key number that correspond to the legal questions he wants answered. Fortunately, appropriate topics and key numbers can be discovered in several ways.

85 84 First of all, as discussed above, every headnote attached to a West-reported case features a corresponding topic and key number. Therefore, if a researcher has discovered one opinion on point, she can lift topics and key numbers from headnotes of interest to discover other cases addressing the same point of law. Similarly, if a researcher has found a relevant statute in an annotated code published by West, then the annotations will likely alert her to any relevant topics and key numbers. See, for example, the annotations in Figure in Chapter 2. Fortunately, even if a researcher does not already have a topic and key number in mind, West digests provide ways to find topics and key numbers of interest. First, at the end of every digest, a researcher will find an index, termed the Descriptive Word Index, which works almost identically to the indexes accompanying codes. A researcher would look up a general term that covers the legal issue in question. Instead of code sections, however, a digest s index lists topics and key numbers for the various issues and subissues. Once a researcher has looked up a term in the index to discover its topic and key number, she can then look up that topic and key number in the corresponding main volume of the digest for a list of cases related to the issue. Note that the index itself does not provide case citations; it must be used in conjunction with the main volumes of the digest. In addition to providing indexes for digests, West divides all of American law into topics, which it fits into an overarching Outline of the Law. Indeed, the topics from this outline are the same that accompany key numbers, and West places the key numbers themselves onto the outline. West publishes its general outline of the law at the beginning of digest volumes. Additionally, in front of each topic in the digest, West provides a more detailed outline of that specific topic. Thus, legal researchers possess the option of browsing through West s outlines to narrow in on a specific issue s topic and key number, much as researchers might use a code s tables of contents to narrow in on specific sections. Figure 3.4.2b gives readers an idea of what West s Outline of the Law looks like.

86 85 Figure 3.4.2b: An Excerpt of West s Outline of the Law as found in the Federal Practice Digest 5th By using the Descriptive Word Index or the Outline of the Law, researchers can identify relevant topics and key numbers they can then use to find case citations, which in turn would allow the researcher to pull relevant judicial opinions. Of course, the opinions themselves may lead the researcher to

87 86 additional topics and key numbers of interest through the headnotes provided by West. Researchers may then look up the additional topics and key numbers in a digest in order to find additional cases. Thus, the topic and key number system provides a powerful tool for researchers to find judicial opinions. West digests also provide a couple of other ways to find cases in addition to the topic and key number system. First, digests contain Tables of Cases volumes that allow researchers to look up cases by the name of either party. Second, digests contain Words and Phrases volumes, which allow researchers to look up a specific word or phrase to find opinions using that exact word or phrase. Both Tables of Cases and Words and Phrases volumes, unlike the topic and key number volumes, will provide case cites in addition to the topics and key numbers assigned to the case. While a researcher would need more starting information to use either of these types of volumes, they do provide an alternative access point to caselaw for print researchers and demonstrate the comprehensiveness of West s digest and reporter system. In fact, as discussed above in section 3.3.4, West s digest and reporter system acted as the sole means of finding precedent for so long that courts deem opinions not published in one of West s reporters to be less than fully precedential. In the modern era of electronic legal research, lawyers more often encounter such unreported opinions. Lawyers need to react to such opinions with caution and to avoid using them as key precedent. Indeed, most courts will only consider unreported opinions under certain circumstances. To determine if a court will consider an unreported opinion, legal researchers should consult the court rules for the jurisdiction in question. 98 Thus, understanding West s reporter and digest system remains important even when conducting electronic legal research Updating Digests When a researcher uses a print edition of a digest, she should keep in mind that, like all print materials, individual digest volumes describe the state of the law at a particular moment in time. By its very nature, however, American law constantly changes with every new judicial opinion 98 Commercial legal publishers generally provide a jurisdiction s Court Rules at the end of its code. Legal researchers may thus find specific court rules by the same methods, described in Chapter 2, with which they would find code provisions.

88 87 published. Thus, it becomes necessary for legal researchers to update the information found in print digests. Because lawyers desire consistency in legal publishing, just as they desire consistency in the law, the primary means of updating the information in digests takes the same form as the primary means of updating the information in annotated codes: the pocket part. In fact, pocket parts for digests work in exactly the same way as pocket parts for codes. 99 If a topic and key number appears in the pocket part, then something about it has changed since publication of the main volume. If a topic and key number does not appear in the pocket part, then nothing changed since the publication of the main volume. Additionally, West may have created a new topic and key number since publication of the main volume. In this instance, the topic and key number will appear in its entirety in the pocket part and not at all in the main volume. West actually updates the Outline of the Law governing the topic and key number system quite frequently. Legal rules or issues may fall out of use, and so key numbers may be dropped. More often, opinions introduce new rules or issues, resulting in the addition of new key numbers. Furthermore, sometimes judicial opinions take a rule from an earlier opinion and expand upon it, or break it into multiple rules. When this happens, West may need to adjust its numbering. When an area of law changes sufficiently, West may even renumber an entire topic. Renumbered topics often confuse law students who are new to legal research. Feelings of frustration may occur when a student has identified a relevant topic and key number from an old case headnote only to discover that the digest no longer contains that topic and key number. Students should not panic when this occurs, though, because West includes key number conversion charts at the beginning of every topic which has been renumbered. 99 Also like pocket parts for codes, pocket parts for digests will be replaced by softbound supplements should they become too big to fit in a bound volume. Eventually the bound volume itself will be replaced.

89 88 Figure 3.4.3: Excerpt from West s Key Number Translation Table for Constitutional Law Note that one old key number often becomes multiple key numbers in renumbered topics. Researchers should look at each of the new topics to understand how the law has changed. Note also that West includes key number conversion charts that operate in the reverse direction, i.e. new key numbers to old key numbers. West does so because, to find older cases on an issue, a researcher may need to consult earlier series of a digest, since digests are not cumulative. Naturally, the older digest series would not use the new numbering scheme Although exceptions exist, West typically does not continue to issue pocket parts for non-current digest series.

90 Subsequent Treatment of Judicial Opinions Of course, changes in the law, by definition, affect not only legal publishing but also the actual law itself. As we have seen, the precedential weight of judicial opinions varies. Furthermore, subsequent treatment of an opinion, by later opinions or by legislatures, often affects the continuing utility of the rules contained in the opinion. Thus, finding and reading an opinion, merely represent the first steps in case-based research; a lawyer must also evaluate an opinion s applicability to her client s circumstances in light of the treatment the opinion has received since it was issued. Subsequent treatment of an opinion ranges from positive to negative. On the positive side, later opinions may discuss, explain, or cite an earlier opinion. If a later court cites an opinion on a specific point, it has implicitly approved the legal rule from the earlier opinion. Such positive citations tend to increase the precedential value of opinions. Judicial opinions also sometimes suffer negative subsequent treatment. For instance, a holding may be overturned in whole or in part by a higher court. Furthermore, appellate courts may overturn their own earlier decisions. A famous example of this occurred when Brown v. Board of Education overturned the earlier Supreme Court decision, Plessy v. Ferguson. 101 Sometimes, a later court may limit or abrogate an earlier opinion without explicitly overturning it. Similarly, if a legislature dislikes a rule from a particular judicial opinion, it can pass a statute changing the law that the opinion had interpreted. The statute would then take precedence over the opinion. Lawyers refer to opinions thus affected as having been superseded by statute. Finally, later judicial opinions may distinguish an earlier case. Distinguishing lies somewhere in between positive and negative treatment. An opinion that distinguishes an earlier opinion essentially recognizes the rule from the earlier opinion as valid but goes on to state that the rule should not apply in the current case because of different material facts. On the one hand, the rule from the earlier opinion remains valid. On the other hand, the rule now only applies to an at least somewhat limited set of facts. The more times an opinion has been distinguished, the narrower its factual application tends to be. Legal researchers who discover a 101 Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U.S. 483, (1954) (overruling Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537 (1896)).

91 90 distinguished opinion should carefully evaluate whether their clients facts fall closer to the original opinion or closer to the distinguishing opinion. Obviously, then, legal researchers need to be able to find the subsequent treatment of an opinion. Historically, lawyers used a print publication called Shepard s Citations to evaluate the subsequent history of an opinion. 102 Using Shepard s Citations in print involved looking up a citation in a bound volume that contained a chart of citing opinions, along with symbols indicating how the later opinions treated the earlier one. Researchers would then look up the citation in a series of supplements that updated the bound volume. The process was fairly inefficient, and in the twenty-first century, lawyers obtain synopses of opinions subsequent treatment almost exclusively electronically. 103 Electronic methods of checking an opinion s subsequent history will be covered in depth in Chapter 5. Because of the near-total predominance of electronic citators in modern legal practice, Shepard s in print will not be covered in this work. However, students should be aware that accounting for the subsequent treatment of precedents has always been a part of the practice of law in the United States. Furthermore, they may occasionally see references to the updating service of the pre-computer era: Shepard s Citations. Thus, legal publishers provided tools that enabled lawyers to effectively research judicial opinions long before the advent of computers. Use of these paper-based tools generally consumed a significant amount of time, and so their use by lawyers has tapered since the advent of computer assisted legal research. However, the electronic platforms themselves rest upon the base organization developed for print. As such, aspiring legal researchers should ensure that they understand the way the paper-based systems function. 102 Note that Shepard s Citations could also be used to find subsequent treatment of statutes, though the fact that statutes were published with annotations made this somewhat less necessary as an extra step. 103 Note that one of the available electronic services for doing so is, in fact, Shepard s, now available on Lexis Advance.

92 Concluding Exercises for Chapter 3 Now try your hand at using digests and reporters to find relevant judicial opinions. As with statutes, if you do not have access to a particular print source for the jurisdiction called for by an exercise, try substituting a jurisdiction to which you do have access. Hello Team: Introductory Exercise on Case Research We have been retained by Molly Lancaster-Ferguson, owner of Awesome Antiques, to defend her from a pending Federal prosecution. The federal charges stem from an isolated incident in which Ms. Lancaster-Ferguson sold an original 1861 Enfield Rifled Musket (a single-shot, muzzle-loading rifle manufactured in Enfield, England, and imported/smuggled in large quantities to arm Confederate troops during the Civil War), which she had found at a garage sale, to an undercover federal agent posing as an online buyer. To the extent of her recollection, the incident in question is the only time that Ms. Lancaster-Ferguson has ever sold a firearm, and she was unaware that it was illegal to do so. The federal authorities have nonetheless charged her with violating a federal law that requires all dealers of firearms to be properly licensed. She is set to be tried in the Eastern District of Kentucky. Use the Federal Practice Digests (potentially more than one series) to look into the following: Thanks, 1) Find me a case, preferably binding, on whether an individual who does not know dealing in weapons without a license is against the law can be convicted of the same. 2) Are there any federal cases, binding or persuasive, that have held that one isolated gun sale does not amount to engaging in the business of dealing in firearms without a license? 3) Based on your findings, do you think it is likely that we can ultimately get an acquittal? Ms. Partner

93 92 Hello Team: Intermediate Exercise on Case Research One of our best clients, Robert Standersen, has made a slightly unusual request of us. Normally, we handle corporate law issues for his orthodontist practice. However, he has asked that we defend his twin children, Brian and Yvette in a criminal conspiracy action being prosecuted by the Commonwealth of Kentucky. Brian and Yvette are seniors at Tates Creek High School. They were arrested while playing hacky-sack in the parking lot of Henry Clay High School last Thursday night at 11:30 pm. Two other Tates Creek High students, Vic Vandal and Hal Hooligan, were also arrested at approximately the same time. Vandal and Hooligan were caught exiting the locked building of Henry Clay High School in possession of crowbars and several soccer championship trophies stolen from display cases in the school s hallway. Neither Vandal nor Hooligan implicated the Standersen twins in the burglary, so the state s case of conspiracy to commit burglary against the twins consists solely of the following pieces of circumstantial evidence: Brian and Yvette are classmates of Vandal and Hooligan at Tates Creek High School and were found at the scene of the crime. Tates Creek and Henry Clay are soccer rivals. Their annual game occurred the night after the incident in question. The Commonwealth s Attorneys are advancing the theory that Brian and Yvette were standing watch for Vandal and Hooligan. I need you all to find post-1974, binding caselaw (Kentucky s current penal code was enacted in 1974) to answer the following questions: Thanks, 1. Is circumstantial evidence alone enough for a conspiracy conviction in Kentucky? 2. Is merely being present at the scene of a crime sufficient for a conspiracy conviction in Kentucky? 3. Is the Commonwealth likely to succeed in its prosecution? Why or why not? Ms. Partner

94 93 Hello Team: Advanced Exercise on Case Research As you are no doubt aware, we represent Bob Bubba Hicklin (founder and CEO of Black Sky Coal) for most of his legal needs. One of Mr. Hicklin s hobbies is breeding and training Bluetick Coonhounds. Seventeen years ago, he purchased a large tract of land along the Tennessee-North Carolina border which he has used since then as his dogs breeding/training ground. Unfortunately, Mr. Hicklin did not survey his lands correctly (he did it himself, another hobby), and the rather large kennel he built at great cost actually lies on lands owned by the Cherokee Nation of North Carolina. The Cherokee have now initiated a legal action against Hicklin for the land and the kennel in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of North Carolina. While the Cherokee Nation does appear to hold title to the land in question, I would like to be able to use the doctrine of adverse possession as a defense. However, I m not sure if I can use North Carolina s adverse possession laws against the Cherokee as tribal lands fall at least partially under federal jurisdiction. I need you to: Thanks, 1. Find me a case from the past 30 years or so (we don t want anything decided before the Indian Civil Rights Movement in the 70s), preferably binding over the Western District of North Carolina, which answers whether or not a state adverse possession defense can be used against Indian lands? 2. Assuming that you find a relevant case, does it tip you off to any other topics/keynumbers that we might want to look at that pertain specifically to Indians and land title? (Keep in mind that nobody at the firm has an expertise in Indian law, so basic definitions might be helpful.) What topics and keynumbers will be most useful to us? 3. Applying relevant authorities to our facts, are we ultimately likely to succeed? Why or why not? Ms. Partner

95 Recommended CALI Lessons for Further Practice CALI hosts an impressive number of interactive lessons on its website. The following lessons on researching cases in print touch upon material covered in this chapter. They would be a great place to start for students looking for further practice on the concepts introduced in this chapter! Anatomy of a Case by Brian Huddleston Summary: an introduction to cases as they appear in reporters. Lesson ID: LR47 URL: How to Find Case law Using the Digests by Brian Huddleston Summary: an overview of researching in print using the digest and reporter system. Lesson ID: LWR29 URL: Updating/Validating Case Law Using Citators by Rebecca S. Trammell and Ashley Krenelka Chase Summary: an overview of the use of citators. Covers print citators, which were alluded to in this chapter, as well as common electronic citators, which we will cover in Chapter 5. Lesson ID: LWR 35 URL:

96 95 Chapter 4 Administrative Regulations I m not the smartest fellow in the world, but I can sure pick smart colleagues. Franklin Delano Roosevelt Let us never forget that government is ourselves and not an alien power over us. The ultimate rulers of our democracy are not a President and senators and congressmen and government officials, but the voters of this country. Franklin Delano Roosevelt 4.1 Learning Objectives for Chapter 4 In working through this chapter, students should strive to be able to: Describe the origins and authority of administrative regulations as a source of law. Assess the primary publications of federal administrative legal materials: the Code of Federal Regulations and the Federal Register. Appreciate the similarities and differences between federal administrative regulations and state administrative regulations. Evaluate the various pieces of information provided in regulatory publications. Evaluate the use of administrative notices, administrative decisions, and other administrative materials in interpreting administrative regulations.

97 Delegated Rule-Making Authority As discussed in Chapter 1, each branch of government under a Separation of Powers system creates its own source of law. In Chapters 2 and 3, we covered the sources of law that most lay-people would recognize as law: constitutions, statutes, and judicial opinions. However, in the American legal system, the executive branch also contributes rules to the body of law. Executive-made rules take the form of administrative regulations, which various executive departments, agencies, and commissions issue under an explicit delegation of rule-making authority from the legislature. Essentially, the legislature passes a statute with a broad aim, and then delegates a particular agency of expertise to provide more specific rules aimed at achieving the broad goal. Lawyers call a statute that creates an agency to regulate a particular area an organic statute or organic act. 104 Similarly, an enabling statute delegates additional authority to an already existing agency. 105 Both organic statutes and enabling statutes establish broad aims desired by the legislature and create mechanisms for agencies to provide the details. As such, regulations tend to be much more specific in nature than statutes. Executive agencies possessing delegated legislative authority have existed in the Anglo-American legal tradition at least since the 1530s, which happens to be when people also first began recognizing the primacy of legislative rule-making authority to begin with. 106 Since their introduction in Tudor times, however, executive branches tended to exercise delegated rulemaking authority somewhat sparingly for the next four centuries or so. Then, in response to the Great Depression in the U.S., the creation of executive agencies and the use of administrative regulations exploded with the New Deal of the 1930s. The Roosevelt administration pushed for the creation of a veritable alphabet soup of federal agencies, partially as an act of job creation, but partially as a way of modernizing the U.S. economy See BLACK S LAW DICTIONARY 1544 (9th ed. 2009). 105 See BLACK S LAW DICTIONARY 1543 (9th ed. 2009). 106 See generally G. R. ELTON, THE TUDOR REVOLUTION IN GOVERNMENT; ADMINISTRATIVE CHANGES IN THE REIGN OF HENRY VIII (1953). 107 For a riveting account of Roosevelt s life and Presidency, see H. W. BRANDS, TRAITOR TO HIS CLASS: THE PRIVILEGED LIFE AND RADICAL PRESIDENCY OF FRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELT (2008).

98 97 However, increasing the amount of regulatory output under delegated authority raised concerns about democracy and due process. After all, many of the experts who draft rules for agencies are directly hired by the agency in question and were not elected by voters. In order to assuage these concerns, the federal government developed a unique system of publication of regulations that allows citizens to comment on proposed regulations before they go into effect. The publication system became formalized by statute in State executive branches likewise often issue copious amounts of regulations in the modern era. Furthermore, state publication of administrative regulations tends to follow the federal model, albeit on a more limited scale. As the federal system of regulation promulgation remains the most sophisticated, we will begin by taking a closer look at federal regulations. 4.3 Researching Federal Regulations As discussed above, the federal government follows a regimented publication procedure for administrative regulations in order to comport with due process. In fact, the federal Government Publishing Office (GPO) issues three separate publications related to regulatory research: the Code of Federal Regulations (C.F.R.), the List of Sections Affected (L.S.A.), and the Federal Register (F.R.). Of the three publications, the C.F.R. allows legal researchers to look up regulations by topic most easily, while the F.R. contains the most background information beyond the regulations themselves. The L.S.A. is used primarily to update C.F.R. sections; think of it as a multi-volume pocket part. The federal government also creates electronic copies of the C.F.R. and F.R., but as the system developed in print, we will introduce it in print in order that students may easily see the interactions between the various pieces of the system The C.F.R. As the use of the word code in its title implies, the C.F.R. contains all federal regulations currently in force, neatly arranged in topical order. What the U.S.C. is for federal statutes, the C.F.R. is for federal regulations. In fact, the two publications share the same basic structure: sections as 108 Administrative Procedure Act, Pub. L. No , 60 Stat. 237 (1946) (codified as amended at 5 U.S.C , , 1305, 3105, 3344, 4301, 5335, 5372, 7521 (2012)).

99 98 building blocks, housed in chapters/sub-chapters, which in turn get grouped into titles. However, because of the dense nature of regulations, the C.F.R. makes use of an additional unit of organization in between the section and chapter levels. This unit is called a part. (Sometimes subparts will also be included.) Nonetheless, the citation of a federal regulation looks substantially similar to the citation of a federal statute: title number, C.F.R., section number. A researcher would pull a regulation by citation just as he would pull a statute by citation. Legal researchers also go about finding regulations on a specific topic in the same ways they would go about finding statutes on a specific topic. Like the U.S.C., the C.F.R. features a series of increasingly-detailed tables of contents. Also like the U.S.C., the C.F.R. includes an index that researchers may use to look up specific terms, though researchers should remember that sometimes a specific term will be located as a subset under a more general index term. Thus, though the source of law differs, researchers should generally use the same methods of research covered in Chapter 2 for codes to discover a specific section within the C.F.R. However, once a researcher has opened a C.F.R. section, he will note some key differences, as well as some similarities. Figure 4.3.1a provides an excerpt from the C.F.R. The first thing the reader probably notices about the regulation is the incredible level of detail provided, especially compared to typical statutory language. This language is typical in regulations. Second, note the lack of annotations. Because regulations change quickly and possess such a high level of detail, commercial publishers do not reprint them, and thus no one provides editorial content. Finally, note that, like the U.S.C., the C.F.R. provides researchers with citations to each section s creating and amending documents. In the C.F.R., these cites refer the researcher to the Federal Register, which will be discussed in section below.

100 99 Figure 4.3.1a: Excerpt from the Code of Federal Regulations Upon locating a relevant regulation, a good researcher will then flip to the beginning of the part in which it appears. For instance, the regulation in

101 100 Figure 4.3.1a, 9 C.F.R. 77.7, may be found in Subpart B of Part 77 of Subchapter C of Chapter 1 of Title 9 of the Code of Federal Regulations. 109 An excerpt from the beginning of said Part 77 appears in Figure 4.3.1b. A good researcher would then do two things. First, he would scan the part s table of contents for other sections that may affect his client, including any definitions or general provisions section. Second, he would look for the statutory grant of authority for the regulations in question. Remember, regulations are issued upon delegated authority. The organic and enabling statutes that did the delegating provide additional necessary avenues of inquiry when researching situations governed by regulations. Figure 4.3.1b: Front matter to Part 77 of C.F.R. Title 9, showing the statutory grant of authority and a portion of the table of contents, or outline, for Part Students have been warned, repeatedly, about the highly dense and technical nature of regulations. The same also applies to C.F.R. organization.

102 101 Thus, the C.F.R. provides a mostly self-contained means to research federal regulations currently in force. Although the G.P.O. publishes each title of the C.F.R. annually, as a print source it captures only a specific moment in time. Because regulations tend to change rapidly, legal researchers should make sure to update any applicable regulations using the second of the federal regulatory publications: the L.S.A The L.S.A. As mentioned above, the List of Sections Affected essentially functions as a giant pocket part to the C.F.R. In fact, the L.S.A. really does what its name suggests; it lists sections of the C.F.R. that have been affected by regulations issued after the last printing of the C.F.R. title in which the section appears. 110 An excerpt from the L.S.A. appears in Figure Figure 4.3.2: Excerpt from the List of Sections Affected 110 Each title of the C.F.R. gets published annually, but the exact date of publication varies by title: Titles 1-16, January 1; Titles 17-27, April 1; Titles 28-41, July 1; Titles 42-50, October 1. Also, by 1 of each month, we mean the first business day of each month.

103 102 Note that only C.F.R. sections that have indeed been affected by subsequent regulation appear in the L.S.A. Thus, if a C.F.R. section does not appear in the L.S.A., then it has not changed and a researcher is free to rely upon the version discovered in the C.F.R. itself. Note also that if a C.F.R. section does appear in the L.S.A., meaning that the text of the regulation has changed since publication, the L.S.A. does not actually reproduce the updated text of the changed regulation. 111 Rather, the L.S.A. refers the researcher to the number of the page upon which the researcher can find the updated text. These page numbers refer to pages of the third of the federal regulatory publications, the Federal Register The F.R. The Federal Register contains much more information than the other federal regulatory publications. It also predates the C.F.R. by more than a decade and serves as the primary means by which regulations satisfy due process. The GPO publishes the F.R. daily. 112 The F.R. s pages number consecutively per year, meaning that the F.R. issue published on January 2 begins with page 1, while page numbers in December issues often approach 6 digits. The consecutive pagination is what allows the L.S.A. to cite the F.R. solely by page number. Other citations to the F.R. proceed as normal: volume number (each year s run constitutes a separate volume), F.R., page number. When a federal administrative agency wishes to change a regulation or issue a new regulation, it first issues the regulation as a Proposed Rule in the Federal Register. Proposed rules provide details on why the regulatory change is needed and give citizens the opportunity to comment upon the proposed rule. Thus the Federal Register s primary purpose is satisfying due process. The F.R. features its own index which can be used to find rules by topic. Figure 4.3.3a provides an excerpt from a proposed rule. Please note, however, that most proposed rules comprise multiple pages. 111 This is where the pocket part analogy breaks down. 112 Meaning, of course, business days.

104 103 Figure 4.3.3a: Excerpt from a Proposed Rule in the Federal Register In addition to proposed rules, agencies also publish final rules in the Federal Register. For instance, after an agency assesses all the comments submitted on a proposed rule, it will make necessary changes and issue it as a final rule. Final rules are then incorporated into the C.F.R. at the appropriate section as regulations. Because the F.R. publishes the final rules, it works in conjunction with the L.S.A. to update C.F.R. sections. Figure 4.3.3b shows the final rule in the F.R. alluded to by the L.S.A. in Figure

105 104 Figure 4.3.3b: A Final Rule in the Federal Register Because of the publication of final rules, researchers may also use old editions of the Federal Register to find former versions of federal regulations, much as researchers may use session laws to find former versions of statutes. In addition to proposed and final rules, the Federal Register also allows administrative departments and agencies to publish notices if they want the public to be aware of a particular issue. Often notices describe administrative hearings or orders, but agencies can use them to provide the public with materials that detail the application of administrative rules. Notices themselves do not carry the force of law but can often offer researchers helpful guidance as to how an agency applies its regulations. Figure 4.3.3c shows an example of a notice in the Federal Register.

106 105 Figure 4.3.3c: A Notice in the Federal Register. Thus, the Federal Register allows compliance with due process, provides a means of updating C.F.R. sections, and publishes a wealth of information lawyers can use for regulatory interpretation. In fact, so useful is the Federal

107 106 Register that the GPO now also produces an online version 113 that can be used via the electronic research methods discussed in Chapter 5. Altogether, the federal government provides a robust publication system for conducting regulatory research Administrative Decisions & Guidance The federal regulatory publishing system described above is comprehensive in that it contains regulations and some supporting materials from all federal agencies. However, the Federal Register does not contain all of the work produced by federal agencies, many of which publish their own titles containing supplemental information. Furthermore, commercial publishers will sometimes gather and publish administrative materials on certain topics. The publications available for administrative materials vary by agency and topic, but researchers can consult Table 1.2 of The Bluebook to determine which publications are available for any particular federal agency. 114 Legal researchers tend to think of supplementary materials produced by administrative agencies in two broad categories: administrative decisions and administrative guidance. While neither of these types of publications create binding rules of law, researchers often use them to help interpret regulations that do possess the force of law. Let us first look at administrative decisions. Administrative decisions resemble judicial opinions, except that they are issued by agencies own hearings or review boards that lack the force of precedent and therefore do not generate common law. 115 This is because administrative adjudicative bodies derive their authority from Congressional delegation and thus are generally treated as Article I Courts after the article of the Constitution providing for Congressional power. 116 Only Article III Courts, those courts whose authority derives THE BLUEBOOK: A UNIFORM SYSTEM OF CITATION tbl.t.1.2 (Columbia Law Review Ass n et al. eds., 19th ed. 1st prtg. 2010). 115 Note that terminology varies from agency to agency. Some agencies may have boards to hear administrative cases, while others may have panels or use some other term. A common thread is that members of agency adjudicative panels are referred to as ALJs or Administrative Law Judges. 116 See BLACK S LAW DICTIONARY 127 (9 th ed. 2009).

108 107 directly from the Constitutional article granting power to the Judiciary, act as common law courts. 117 Researchers may find administrative decisions in a variety of places. First, many individual agency publications contain decisions, and these publications can generally be found in print at libraries participating in the Federal Depository Library Program. For example, decisions of the Interior Board of Indian Appeals appear in Interior Decisisons, the reporter of administrative decisions compiled by the Department of the Interior and sent to Federal Depository Libraries by the GPO. However, visiting a Federal Depository Library and/or enlisting the aid of a government documents librarian can be time consuming. For this reason, the full-service legal search platforms all include at least some administrative decisions, which can be found using the methods described in Chapter 5. The websites of agencies themselves also often link to their administrative decisions. Researchers should consult the United States Government Manual 118 for an official listing of all federal agencies, and USA.gov provides links to the agency websites. Regardless of how a researcher finds administrative decisions, he may use them to help interpret regulations but should not rely on them as common-law precedent. In addition to issuing decisions actively applying their regulations to controversies, most agencies also produce manuals and other internal documents that researchers can use to determine how an agency is likely to interpret its own regulations. These materials are referred to as administrative guidance. For example, the Internal Revenue Service (I.R.S.) publishes the Internal Revenue Manual, 119 which describes how the I.R.S. conducts its business. While administrative guidance materials vary from agency to agency, researchers should be able to find them in similar ways to administrative decisions: in Federal Depository Libraries, in commercial databases, or on agency websites. Regardless of the form the 117 See id. 118 The United States Government Manual is the official handbook of the federal government and provides a detailed description of the three branches of government and the offices that comprise them. Print copies may be found in Federal Depository Libraries, and the manual is also available electronically at The Internal Revenue Manual can be found in print at Federal Depository Libraries and electronically at

109 108 materials take, researchers can use them to help interpret and apply federal administrative regulations as a source of law. 4.4 State Regulations State executive agencies also issue binding administrative regulations, though not to the same extent as federal agencies. At first this may strike the reader as counterintuitive. If federal competency is limited to enumerated powers only, would one not expect to find less, rather than more federal regulations? The answer to this quandary lies in two facts. First, administrative regulations often target complicated commercial and industrial activities, and so regulating interstate state commerce requires numerous and detailed regulations in a variety of areas. Second, state budgets tend to pale in comparison to the federal budget. Thus, federal agencies tend to be more numerous and better staffed than state agencies. Nonetheless, state executive branches do regulate certain activities within their states. In format, administrative regulations will vary state by state to a certain degree, but they often mimic the form of federal regulations. For example, Figure 4.4 shows an administrative regulation from Kentucky. Note the explicit reference to the statutory grant of authority, just like federal regulations contain. Also, if a researcher flipped to the beginning of either the chapter or title that house the particular regulation (Chapter 10, and Title 902 respectively), he would find a table of contents for that particular unit of organization. Also, most state administrative codes include a topical index at the end. Thus, legal researchers interact with state administrative codes in the same ways they would with the C.F.R. Furthermore, citation of state administrative regulations tends to resemble that of federal regulations, though of course this varies depending upon the state. 120 Typically, though, lawyers cite state administrative codes in the standard title number-code abbreviation-section number format. 120 For a complete list of state administrative regulation citation schemes, see THE BLUEBOOK: A UNIFORM SYSTEM OF CITATION tbl.t.1.3 (Columbia Law review Ass n et al. eds., 19th ed. 1st prtg. 2010).

110 109 Figure 4.4: 902 KAR 10:130 Most states also publish administrative registers, in the style of the Federal Register. However, most state administrative registers amount to very poor imitations of the F.R. (mostly because the states themselves are much poorer entities than the federal government). For instance, Kentucky s administrative register is published monthly (as opposed to daily) and contains far less information. It still provides citizens with notice of proposed rule changes, and researchers still can use it to update administrative code sections, though state administrative codes usually are not big enough to require a separate list of sections affected. (Affected sections instead typically appear in list form in part of the administrative register.) Also like federal agencies, state agencies both hold hearings that lead to administrative decisions and create internal documentation that researchers can use for administrative guidance. As with the other administrative materials, the availability of administrative decisions and guidance varies state by state and tends to be less prevalent at the state level than the federal level. Students interested in conducting state administrative research should contact a law librarian in their state to learn what sources are available.

111 110 Thus, legal researchers typically interact with state administrative materials in the same ways with which they interact with federal regulatory publications. Indeed, the major differences between federal and state regulatory publications are differences of scale. It is important that aspiring lawyers learn to interact with regulations at both the state and federal levels, as regulations act as the source of law for the executive branch and often govern commercial activities in their jurisdiction. We have now introduced students to all the building blocks of modern legal research. Let us now turn our attention to the predominant means of finding those blocks: electronic research.

112 Concluding Exercises for Chapter 4 Try your hand at conducting regulatory research! Introductory Exercise on Researching Regulations Hello all, We have been engaged to advise Giovanni Jonny Camminatore on a business venture he plans to undertake as a retirement career. Mr. Camminatore, an amateur distiller, wants to bring his most recent attempt at whiskey to market as Erba Azzurie Bourbon. I will need you to do the following: Find the regulations in the C.F.R. that deal with labeling and advertising of liquors. Is there a regulation that defines standards of identity for different types of spirits? Thanks, Mr. Partner According to the regulation you found, what steps must Mr. Camminatore take in his whiskey-production process in order to label it as bourbon?

113 Intermediate Exercise on Researching Administrative Guidance Dear Team: We have been engaged by Sinclair Upton, a research scientist and product developer for Bow Chow Industries, Inc., a pet food manufacturer. Dr. Upton is concerned about some of the additives that Bow Chow puts into one of its lines of canned dog food. He is considering whistle-blowing on the company to the F.D.A. as a confidential informant. Before he does, however, he would like assurances that the F.D.A. will preserve his anonymity. I need you to find some F.D.A. guidance documents (preferably the F.D.A. manual) that outline their procedures for protecting the anonymity of confidential informants in the context of the F.D.A. s inspection procedures related to animal food additives. Let me know what you find. Regards, Mr. Partner

114 Advanced Exercise on Researching Regulations Hello all, Last week when I was having my annual check-up, my allergist, Dr. Billie Mayes, mentioned that she s been working on a new generic inhaler (tentatively to be marketed as The Wheeze-Whacker ) which I currently take the designer version of. Unfortunately, she told me that she could not get it to work without using an ozone-damaging aerosol, and that she is afraid the FDA, under the influence of the EPA, will not allow the inhaler to go to market. The generic would potentially save individual asthma sufferers between six hundred and twelve hundred dollars a year, so I told her I d have my people look into it. Dr. Mayes describes the Wheeze-Whacker as a super short-acting, rescue bronchodilator extraordinaire. Each unit consists of 200 metered doses with an extra 4 priming doses. The active moieties in the inhaler are flunisolide and albuterol. I would like you to answer the following: 1) Find a federal regulation on using aerosols that damage the ozone in drugs, specifically asthma inhalers. 2) Assuming such a regulation exists, does it prohibit the use of said aerosols, and if so, does it include any exceptions? (Asthma drugs are life-savers; surely there are exceptions for things of that nature!) 3) Would the Wheeze-Whacker, in its specific make-up, qualify under a necessity-type (or however they phrase it) exception? What authority supports your answer? 4) What statute(s) grant(s) authority to the FDA to regulate the use of ozone-damaging aerosols in drugs such as inhalers? Thanks, Mr. Partner

115 Recommended CALI Lessons for Further Practice CALI hosts an impressive number of interactive lessons on its website. The following lessons on researching administrative law touch upon material covered in this chapter. They would be a great place to start for students looking for further practice on the concepts introduced in this chapter! Introduction and Sources of Authority for Administrative Law by Deborah K. Paulus-Jagric and Clare Willis Summary: an introduction to agencies powers within the constitutional scheme and the regulatory process. Lesson ID: LWR 33 URL: Rulemaking: Federal Register and CFR by Katie Brown and Deborah K. Paulus-Jagric Summary: an overview of the rulemaking process and the publication of the same. Lesson ID: LWR19 URL: Researching Federal Administrative Regulations by Sheri H. Lewis Summary: an overview of researching federal regulations using print sources. Lesson ID: LWR 06 URL: Agency Decisions and Orders by Marcia Baker and L. Elliott Hibbler Summary: an introduction to the process of researching federal agency decisions. You should expect to encounter: overview of agency regulatory powers; types of agency decisions; how to find them; how to update them; and their precedential value.

116 115 Lesson ID: LR57 URL: Government Documents by Alicia Brillon Summary: to familiarize the user with the range of documents produced by the Federal government, where they can be found, and how they can be used in a law practice. The lesson focuses on issues surrounding government documents including: authenticity, how to find and use government documents, and statistics. Lesson ID: LR96 URL: Attorney General Materials by Marcia Baker and Maureen H. Anderson Summary: an introduction to federal and state attorney general materials. Lesson ID: LR44 URL:

117 116 Chapter 5 Electronic Research I think it s fair to say that personal computers have become the most empowering tool we ve ever created. They re tools of communication, they re tools of creativity, and they can be shaped by their user. Bill Gates The good news about computers is that they do what you tell them to do. The bad news is that they do what you tell them to do. Ted Nelson 5.1 Learning Objectives for Chapter 5 In working through this chapter, students should strive to be able to: Use and combine the basic processes of online research: searching, browsing, and limiting results through the use of filters. Construct well-tailored searches with terms and connectors. Use a computer to find legal authorities and apply them to a given set of facts. Compare the value of human-created citators to computergenerated citators. Use electronic citators both to update legal authorities and to discover related legal authorities. Note: The images presented in this chapter all link to external screencasts of the processes described. Readers are encouraged to watch the screencasts to see the techniques in use. Screencasts may be accessed by clicking on the URL provided in each image s caption.

118 Introduction to Electronic Research While the advent of computers and the Internet have revolutionized the practice of law, aspiring legal researchers should note that the goals of legal research remain the same regardless of whether one uses computers or books. At its core, the practice of law consists of locating relevant legal authorities, applying the authorities to a set of facts, and then communicating the predicted or desired result of the application. Thus, legal researchers seek the same sources of law with computers that they do with books: constitutions, statutes, judicial opinions, and administrative regulations. Furthermore, computers did not achieve prominence until roughly a hundred years after the professionalization of the practice of law. As a result, the major legal publishers originally crafted their information systems in a strictly paper-based world. While the same publishers later quickly realized the potential advantages of using computers for legal research, they did not abandon their underlying information systems. Thus, not only will legal researchers find the text of the underlying legal authorities to be the same in electronic format as in print, but the publishers also provide the same added-value content, such as key numbers, case headnotes, and code annotations. 121 Though they facilitate the same goals of research as print-based resources, computers do revolutionize the process. Electronic research can be a much more efficient way of accessing legal authorities than finding them in books. Computers, particularly networked computers (i.e. the Internet), by their nature hold vastly more information than a single book. Furthermore, hyperlinks allow researchers to jump from one information object to another without the need to retrieve a separate volume for each piece of information. While a researcher using print resources might use four 121 The use of editorial content, even in electronic form, can be a highly efficient way to research. Students are encouraged to make use of relevant headnotes and annotations at every opportunity. However, as not all legal research platforms benefit from the inclusion of editorial content, in this chapter we will focus on the basic processes of electronic research that can be used universally.

119 118 volumes from three different sets just to find a single case, 122 a researcher using a computer might find several cases in a fraction of the time using just a few clicks of a mouse. Another advantage computers offer the legal researcher stems from the fact that they process large amounts of information very quickly. As such, a computer can read a document much faster than a person can. However, computers are not actually good at understanding what they read. Thus, while a computer could help a researcher quickly find every instance of the phrase custodial interrogation in Kentucky state court cases from the past decade, it would not be able to summarize accurately what Kentucky courts have held to be the key features that render the interrogation of a suspect by the police custodial. A researcher would need to read through the results to find the appropriate rulings but would be spared the work of actually gathering the results. Given the efficiency boost computers provide to legal research, it should come as no surprise that creating and maintaining electronic legal research tools has become a large and profitable business. Equally unsurprisingly, many of the major players in the electronic legal research platform business began as traditional paper-based legal publishers. After all, the publishers already had on hand not only the ultimate goals of legal research, the primary legal authorities, but also their proprietary information systems and added-value content. Also, practicing attorneys were already accustomed to using the proprietary systems to great effect. Furthermore, the precomputer systems actually help to address computers weakness in the comprehension department. For example, the West key number system features a key number for the issue what constitutes custody, 123 and by using the headnotes labeled with this key number, the researcher from the above example could narrow in on the relevant parts of individual cases that appear in the search results. As with most industries, the legal research platform business features various market segments. At the top end of the market lie full-service legal platforms such as WestlawNext and Lexis Advance that will meet fully the needs of legal researchers across American legal topics and jurisdictions. 122 For example: a volume of the Descriptive Word Index of the Kentucky Digest, 2d; a main volume of the Kentucky Digest, 2d; a volume of the South Western Reporter; and a volume of Shepard s Kentucky Citations. This example also leaves out the pocket parts, supplements, and advance sheets that should be consulted. 123 Criminal Law (110) k

120 119 More recently, Bloomberg L.P. (an electronic resource publisher focusing on finance) has branched into the legal information market and now offers Bloomberg Law as a third full-service legal research platform. A key feature of the full-service providers, beyond their breadth of coverage, remains the inclusion of human-created value-added content to support basic computer processing. The legal research platform market also features budget model legal platforms, such as Casemaker, Fastcase, and LoislawConnect. Generally speaking, the budget models rely on computers to a much greater extent and include little or no human-generated content. While these services come with a significantly lower price tag than the full service providers, their results may vary, and they require more effort and attention from researchers using them. In between the top end of the market and the budget models, many publishers offer niche services. For example, Thomson Reuters, in addition to Westlaw, produces RIA Checkpoint, an electronic research platform devoted to tax law research. Similarly, Wolters Kluwer provides CCH Intelliconnect, a service similarly focused on tax. Another example comes from William S. Hein & Co., which offers HeinOnline, a platform focusing on academic and historic legal materials, while ProQuest s Legislative Insight provides legislative history documents in digital form. Niche electronic legal research platforms vary in the amount of human-generated features they use. Luckily for the legal researcher, despite the proliferation of various types of electronic legal research platforms, they all rely on the same basic tools: personal computers and the Internet. Because computers tend to be nonsemantic, very literal machines, they tend to interact with information in similar ways regardless of specific software programming. Thus, an aspiring legal researcher would be well served to focus on basic processes of electronic research, which then could be used on any and all electronic research platforms (legal or otherwise). 5.3 Basic Processes of Electronic Research It is probably not a stretch to surmise that the majority of American law students in the 21 st Century possess extensive experience with the Internet. People use the same basic processes to navigate the Internet whether they do so to perform in-depth research, to shop for a new pair of shoes, or to check the box score of last night s basketball game. Searching, browsing,

121 120 and filtering 124 are the actions that comprise the navigation of electronic materials. Aspiring legal researchers most likely perform all three actions in accessing the Internet and probably do so quite frequently. The same basic actions will be used for electronic legal research. This is not to say, however, that law students already know how to use electronic resources to research effectively. Law, in its myriad sources, is a complex system. Furthermore, law involves the interpretation of the meaning of words, an activity for which computers are currently ill-suited. Thus, while the basic processes used for recreational Internet-surfing will be the same as those that are used for legal research, a greater level of precision and efficiency must be employed for the latter lest one be inundated by irrelevant results, as seen in Figure Filtering is sometimes also referred to as limiting or selecting facets. For purposes of clarity and consistency, filtering will be used here.

122 121 Figure 5.3: Searching for due process on WestlawNext yields 10,000 cases, which is an artificial limit set by West. Click here for screencast: Too many results can be just as bad for a legal researcher as too few. Not only will she not have time to read through all the results, but they may not all be relevant to her problem. Citing something that does not apply to the case at hand looks just as bad as failing to cite a key opinion that does apply. For these reasons, it is of paramount importance that law students work to become precise, efficient researchers Searching In daily life, most people retrieve information from the Internet by searching. Thus, most aspiring legal researchers will be familiar with the rudiments of the process. After all, we have even named the programs we use to find information on the Internet search engines. Furthermore, the name of the most successful and widely used of the search engines has achieved synonymy with looking stuff up on the Internet. 125 At its core, searching is a simple process that consists of typing terms into a text box, referred to as a search bar, and then scanning through the results. The terms typed may be as simple as a single word or as complex as complete sentences. For example, if I wanted to find out how many sets of Duplo blocks 126 I would need to buy to complete my son s zoo collection, I could search for the single word Duplo, search for a phrase such as Duplo zoo sets, or even ask a question: How many zoo sets does Duplo make? The search engine then uses an algorithm to scan websites and return results likely to give me the information I need. Note that the computer does not actually comprehend what is on each page, it merely counts terms (and sometimes synonyms for the terms, depending on the algorithm) and links and returns sites that may answer my question. Therefore, I would still need to evaluate the results in order to choose the one most likely to have my information. In this case, I would trust Lego s website to accurately list all Duplo zoo sets in production. I would trust Lego s website as Lego is the maker of the toys and has a commercial interest in selling its products. Whereas a vendor like Amazon 125 For example, I don t know; have you tried Googling it? 126 Duplo is the line of plastic blocks for toddlers made by Danish toy-making giant, Lego.

123 122 would only let me know what sets it currently had available for sale, Lego as the manufacturer would most likely let me know of every set in production and would likely even offer suggestions as to where I could purchase them. The evaluation and selection of appropriate websites for a given problem, like I have described here, is sometimes referred to as information literacy. The searches for Duplo blocks described above use terms and sentences from everyday conversational use. Programmers and web designers refer to these as natural language searches. Natural language searches generally rely on a search engine s algorithm to find relevant information, a technique that works reasonably well when one uses a unique term such as the brand name Duplo. However, natural language searches require a relatively robust application of information literacy. For complex fields of knowledge such as law, beginning researchers may find the application of advanced information literacy challenging. After all, law comprises multitudes of individual information objects from a multitude of different jurisdictions. It may take several years of experience before a researcher achieves full literacy in the variety of sources that make up the field. Aside from requiring a high-level of information literacy, natural language searches also often return too many results, or results not precise enough for the needs of the researcher. This is especially true for fields with controlled vocabularies and frequent reuse of terms. Law, of course, with its multiple sources, multiple jurisdictions, and many terms of art, is such a field. This is not to say that full service legal information providers do not support natural language searching. In fact, the platforms of the current generation of legal search providers default to a natural language search, mostly as a response to the rise of Google and a fear that millennial attorneys would flee in terror from anything more complicated than a Google-style unified search bar. While it is possible to use a natural language search as a starting point for legal research, it is best suited for relatively simple legal questions, and even then usually returns a relatively large number of results that will require a researcher with good information literacy skills to be able to recognize what is most useful. It will also likely involve further substantial research. For example, the search in Figure seeks an answer to the question of whether California recognizes common law marriages, a relatively straight-forward yes-or-no question, and returns over 33,000 results. Note that the algorithm (which West tailored specifically for legal research) does present authority to answer the yes or

124 123 no question; however, it also presents a lot of information that does not answer the question. It would be up to the researcher to determine which of the results provide proper legal authority to answer the question. Thus, natural language searching is usually not the most efficient way to research complex issues of law. Figure 5.3.1: A natural language search on WestlawNext. Click here for screencast: Search Operators & Advance Searching Happily, the creators of the full service legal information providers (and indeed the creators of search engines generally) include in their products tools that enable legal researchers to take greater control of the search from the algorithm in order to achieve more precise results. Programmers call these tools operators because they operate upon the basic search function to modify the algorithm used, and researchers can usually find a list of available operators through an advanced search interface. Advanced searching encompasses several different types of operators, most notably for legal research: connectors, expanders, and fields. Connectors are terms that alert the computer that the researcher would like to limit results to pieces of information that contain specific search criteria. For instance, the connector & used in between two terms on WestlawNext tells the computer that you would only like results that contain both terms you are looking for and not one or the other. Similarly, /p used between two terms would tell the computer that not only would the researcher like

125 124 the results to contain both terms but that he or she would like both terms to occur in the same paragraph. Different platforms sometimes recognize slightly different connectors but usually a researcher will be able to find a list of recognized connectors via a link on the search platform itself. 127 Expanders work similarly to connectors in that researchers use them in combination with search terms in order to modify results of a search. Whereas connectors work in between terms to connect two or more terms, however, expanders work within terms. For example, on WestlawNext the! functions as a root expander. This means that a researcher could use an exclamation point to retrieve multiple variations of a word from a common root. For instance, searching for the term declar! would return results containing the following words: declare, declaring, declarant, declaration, etc. Thus, while connectors tend to limit results, expanders will sometimes yield more results but will obviate the need for multiple searches if searching for a term that exists in multiple variations. Aspiring legal researchers may encounter the phrase terms and connectors in reference to using both connectors and expanders. Technically, only connectors refers to the search operators while terms refer to the researcher s individual search terms, which would need to be generated even for a natural language search. Using connectors along with terms, however, better allows a researcher to limit results to only those most relevant to the problem at hand. Figure 5.3.2a provides a list of commonly recognized search operators. 127 On WestlawNext, click advanced next to the search button for a list of connectors; on Lexis Advance click the Filters button within the search bar and select Advanced Search from the dropdown menu; on Bloomberg Law, click on search help next to the keywords box.

126 125 Operator Effect AND Returns only documents containing both terms. OR Returns documents containing either term. Often used with synonyms. NOT Returns documents containing the first term but excludes any documents that also contain the second. /s Returns documents with both terms in the same sentence. /p Returns documents with both terms in the same paragraph. Returns only documents that contain the entire phrase found within the quotes.! Root expander; will return documents containing any variation of a root word. * Universal character; the computer will treat the * as all letters. Useful if looking at alternate spellings, e.g. defen*e if looking at both English and American cases. Figure 5.3.2a: Commonly Used Connectors and Expanders Often, expert legal researchers will combine search terms, connectors, and expanders into a single search as a way to get precise, relevant results. When constructing advanced searches using multiple operators, it often becomes necessary to break your search query into individual parts with parentheses, which will tell the computer to do one thing at a time (much as parentheses work in math problems). Using parentheses is especially important if combining the connectors OR and AND so that the computer knows precisely what you want. For example, if I wanted to use WestlawNext to find the Kentucky laws on determining child custody after divorce and had no foreknowledge of what specific terms the Commonwealth of Kentucky prefers, I might craft the following search: advanced: (divorce OR dissolution of marriage ) AND (custod! /s child!)

127 126 The hypothetical search above contains a series of operators, as well as four terms that I think describe my legal problem. For instance, advanced: tells WestlawNext that I am interested in applying operators to my search rather than relying on a natural language search. The first set of parentheses containing OR tells the computer that I want results that contain the word divorce or the complete phrase dissolution of marriage. The second set of parentheses indicates that I want my results to contain a variation of the word custody and a variation of the word child within the same sentence, while the AND lets the computer know that I want both sets of conditions to be present within the same document. By using these operators I have narrowed my results to those likely to address my specific problem, though I will still need to expand my research. Figure 5.3.2b: An advanced search using multiple operators on Westlaw. Click here for screencast:

128 127 Field searching represents an alternative way to limit research results through use of an operator. When legal information providers upload sources of law to their electronic platforms, they often divide the source information into different segments or fields. Researchers may then search each of these fields individually. Different sources may contain different fields. For instance, on WestlawNext codified statutes are broken into nine fields: preliminary, caption, preliminary/caption (in other words, the first two fields combined), citation, annotations, credit, statutory text, historical notes, and words & phrases (a specific finding aid originally produced as a print publication). Meanwhile, the same provider divides published cases into twenty-four separate fields: date, party name, citation, synopsis, digest, synopsis/digest, judge, attorney, court name/prelim, docket number, background, concurring, court abbreviation, dissenting, full text, headnote, holding, lead notes, opinions, panel, topic, words & phrases, and written by. Though the fields vary, a researcher can use any individual field to increase the precision of a search. By this point, most law students probably understand the need to vary potential search fields by search. After all, what would be the point of including statutory text in something that is not a statute? Similarly, law students no doubt recognize concurring and dissenting as pertaining to judicial opinions, and as things that only matter in caselaw. Law students may also have recognized that some of the fields correspond to value-added content that West, as a publisher, adds to primary source documents, such as headnotes. The replication of these print-based information systems, when combined with the ability to field search, gives legal researchers the ability to narrowly tailor their searches to be as precise as possible. To conduct a fielded search, a researcher may either enter an advanced search interface and type terms into the appropriate boxes or add field commands to a hand-crafted search. Note, however, that different publishers assign different fields to different sources. Furthermore, the abbreviated field search commands vary from platform to platform, so it may be a good idea to at least scope out the advanced search interface or click on a help button when conducting a field search. Expert researchers often use field searches in combination with other search operators.

129 128 Figure 5.3.2c: An advanced search on Westlaw using a field search. Click here for screencast: Though search operators offer researchers greater control over the precision of searches, even well-crafted advanced searches, if performed on databases comprising multiple jurisdictions and sources, often still yield thousands of results. A practicing attorney will not necessarily have time to read through even a few hundred legal authorities. Thus, good researchers combine searching with other techniques Browsing In an electronic research context, browsing refers to the process of clicking through a website s inherent organization to narrow in on the information one is seeking. Most aspiring legal researchers probably already engage in this sort of activity in everyday web use. Indeed, one hears the term web browsing almost as often as one hears the term search engine. An example of common everyday use of browsing on the web is the checking of sports scores. I typically check the previous night s basketball scores over my morning cup of coffee by going to espn.com, clicking on the NBA tab, and then clicking on the scores tab that appears in the dropdown menu beneath NBA. Thus, I use the site s internal organization to bring up the information I want. All websites feature the inherent organization that make browsing possible, but legal search providers excel at it. For instance, Lexis Advance allows researchers to browse either by source or by topic (as defined by the LexisNexis editors). By browsing by topic, researchers can find authorities

130 129 related to a specific subtopic of the law. Similarly, by browsing by source, researchers can identify specific sources of interest. West, Bloomberg, and other legal information providers follow similar schemes. However, not only do the publishers provide organization, but many of the legal sources, such as topically-organized codes, contain their own inherent structure. Thus, a good legal researcher can sometimes find what she needs just by clicking through a legal search platform. Figure 5.3.3: Browsing on Lexis Advance. Click here for screencast: Reprinted from LexisNexis with permission. Copyright 2015 LexisNexis. All rights reserved. Broadly speaking, browsing resembles using a book s table of contents to find information via the work s organization, while searching is akin to using as index as it allows researchers to find instances of specific words or phrases. 128 Both techniques work to find specific information, but sometimes the most efficient way to research an issue fully is to combine both techniques. When researching electronically, researchers can also combine searching and browsing with a third technique: filtering. 128 Note that an index may actually be more helpful than a full-text search, as indexes typically employ controlled vocabularies and are generally created by humans who understand the meaning of a search term and so link it to where it is actually discussed as opposed to merely appearing in the text, which is all a computer can recognize. In fact, publishers recognize the value of indexes and include them in digital form for many of the sources published on electronic platforms.

131 Filtering Filtering is a process by which electronic researchers focus on some search results while excluding others. It works somewhat similarly to field searching in that information providers assign metadata 129 to individual information objects which researchers may then use to separate the wheat from the chaff. Of Internet sites encountered in everyday life, the online retailer Amazon may be the most obvious user of filters. Amazon s filters allow would-be customers to find exactly what they are looking for among a multitude of results. For example, if one wanted to buy soccer shoes from Amazon, one could search for soccer shoes and then filter the results by brand, size, color, and even average customer review, which are all pieces of metadata collected by Amazon and applied to each individual product entry. Filtering may be the most flexible of the electronic information gathering processes. It can be performed pre-search or post-search. Furthermore, most sites (including the legal information providers) allow users to remove filters and instantaneously receive the full results of an unfiltered search. Legal researchers should therefore feel confident that they will not lose vital information by filtering. Legal information providers generally build a number of useful filters into their platforms. Commonly used filters include by source type (statute, case, regulation, etc.), by jurisdiction, by date, by topic (as assigned by editors working for the information provider), and similarly useful facets. 130 Researchers may typically find available filters listed in a box to the left of delivered search results. Figure shows the use of filters on Bloomberg Law. 129 The term metadata refers to any data describing an underlying piece of data used to make computers work. For example, tagging a photo on Facebook with the names of people in the photo is providing metadata about the photo that will enable other Facebook users to find it if they search for the name of a tagged individual. Pieces of metadata can be called different things but fields, tags, and facets are some common terms. 130 In the case of WestlawNext, the information systems developed by West for print resources are often included as facets.

132 131 Figure 5.3.4: Using filters on Bloomberg Law to narrow in on relevant laws. Click here for screencast: Q. Reproduced with permission from Bloomberg Law. Copyright (2015) by The Bureau of National Affairs, Inc. ( ) < Filtering is a powerful, powerful tool that allows researchers to hone in on particularly relevant information without discarding other potentially useful results. 5.4 Combining the Basic Processes for Efficient Research While a researcher can use any of searching, browsing, and filtering to find relevant results, the best researchers often combine the basic processes to find the best results the most efficiently. 131 To a certain extent, this is true of all electronic information gathering, whether for formal research or personal use. For example, if I wanted to download a new fantasy book to read for some good, old-fashioned escapism I might use all three basic processes on Amazon s website. First, I would browse through Amazon s internal organization to get to fantasy as a sub-genre under Kindle e- 131 Note that, while I used Westlaw to demonstrate searching, LexisNexis to demonstrate browsing, and Bloomberg to demonstrate filtering, all three platforms support all three activities, as do virtually all other electronic search platforms.

133 132 books. Next, I would enter a search term, such as urban, for a particular type of fantasy setting. Finally, I would apply a filter for an average customer review of 4 stars or higher (there is a lot of bad fantasy out there). \As the example above illustrates, much web navigation that most people would probably regard as fairly routine regularly combines searching, browsing, and filtering. Of course, doing so efficiently becomes more important the more complexity one s research task possesses. Unfortunately for aspiring legal researchers, American law tends to be one of the more complex subjects to research. 132 Like most complicated tasks, the knowledge of when to shift from searching to browsing to filtering and back to achieve ideal efficiency improves with practice and experience. First year law students should focus on mastering the individual processes 133 of electronic research and developing an awareness of the potential power in combining them. For instance, in order to find caselaw on Bloomberg Law to determine whether juveniles are constitutionally entitled to jury trials in Kentucky, I would start by browsing down to court opinions from Kentucky courts. Then, I would construct a well-formed advanced search. In this case, my terms are likely to be: juvenile, jury trial, and constitutional. Furthermore, I want the jury trial to be related to the constitutional issue, so I would add connectors and construct the search as follows: ( jury trial /s constitution!) AND juvenile This well-crafted search yields a workable number of cases, but for good measure I would add filters to make sure I start with the case that I really want. Specifically, I would add a topical filter (criminal law) and a court filter (KY Supreme Court) to return topically significant and fully mandatory cases. I have thus trimmed my results down to two cases, one of which is unreported, and the other of which is the controlling precedent on the issue. After I read the controlling case, I can always expand my research by removing filters. 132 On the plus side, thanks to the full-service legal information providers described elsewhere in this chapter, the bulk of the law can actually be found on the web. Again, electronic research, done properly, can be much more efficient than paper-based research. 133 This includes moving beyond the comfort of the Google-style search bar and using advanced search techniques.

134 133 Figure 5.4: Combining searching, browsing, and filtering in conducting electronic legal research. Click here for screencast: Figure 5.4: Using connectors on Bloomberg Law to narrow in on relevant cases. Click here for screencast: Reproduced with permission from Bloomberg Law. Copyright (2015) by The Bureau of National Affairs, Inc. ( ) < Thus, using advanced searching, browsing, and filtering enables a legal researcher to give the computers 134 enough guidance to find what the researcher needs. Furthermore, the computers use their processing power to narrow in on the relevant results by examining complete data sets of American law. In essence, the entirety of the law is at a networked computer s disposal, and the trick for the researcher is finding a way to tell the network which specific source, of the millions that comprise the law, that the researcher needs. Searching, browsing, and filtering all help to limit the universe of potential results to only those that are most relevant. A well-trained legal researcher with a networked computer can gather in a matter of hours the number of relevant legal authorities that used to take lawyers days to assemble using print publications, yet gathering sources is not the only efficiency upgrade that computers offer to legal researchers. Electronic research also eclipses print research when it comes to updating the law. 134 There are multiple computers at work on every online research query. The researcher uses a personal computer to network with the servers that house the search engines or research platforms that lead the researcher to the information desired. The returned information may be stored on yet more servers.

135 Electronic Citators As discussed earlier when introducing the various sources of law in their print forms, law tends to change. Statutes may be amended or declared unconstitutional. Cases may be overruled or superseded by statute. Regulations may be repealed or modified by new regulations. Thus, finding the law represents only the first step. A legal researcher also needs to update the law to make sure the source she found remains valid. Over the years, legal publishers developed systems that aided researchers in this task. Print codes receive pocket parts that alert researchers to amendments made in statutes. Shepard s developed a system for informing researchers what sorts of subsequent treatment a case received. The federal government published the List of Sections affected to tell researchers which regulations changed. Computers render print-based updating services obsolete. Citators are tools developed by legal information providers that aid researchers in determining a source s subsequent treatment, a process often referred to as updating the law. Note that the word citator, which legal information providers more or less made up, contains the same root as the word citation. The name stems from the way citators are created. Essentially, legal information providers gather all subsequent authorities that cite the earlier authority in question and then determine how those subsequent authorities have impacted the original authority. Legal information providers go about building citators in two broad ways. Budget model platforms, such as Casemaker and Fastcase, use computers for both the gathering of subsequent sources and the determination of impact. Essentially, they construct a search algorithm that finds all cites of the original search and then looks for certain key terms, such as overruled or superseded, nearby the citation. The computer, based on its count of terms, then makes an attempt at determining whether or not the original authority continues as valid precedent. The problem with this approach is that computers excel at computation but struggle with the nuance of language. Humans recognize shades in meaning and the subtleties of language but sometimes give in to the temptation of the rhetorical flourish. Thus, judges writing opinions sometimes include words that mean different things in different contexts, and computers sometimes count the words as meaning something they do not.

136 135 A computer-generated citator is better than nothing, 135 but by far the preferable approach is to trust humans with extensive legal training to make determinations of the impact of subsequent authorities upon a source. The drawback of this approach is that humans with extensive legal training tend to expect extensive compensation (at least compared to a computer which requires only a power source), and so only the expensive, full-service legal information providers have managed to create true, human-created citators. As the old adage goes, though, you get what you pay for. The three full-service, high-price legal information providers each include a citator on their respective platforms. LexisNexis acquired Shepard s Citations in 1996, promptly converted it to an electronic format (as well as continuing to publish the print), and includes it on Lexis Advance. Westlaw developed KeyCite to compete with Shepard s, and Bloomberg likewise created BCite upon entering the legal information business in The three services function similarly in that they all give researchers a quick visual clue as to a legal authority s continued validity, they all link a researcher to all citing references of an authority, and they are all fully integrated with the primary materials themselves. When a researcher encounters a legal authority on WestlawNext, Lexis Advance, or Bloomberg Law, she may see a brightly-colored symbol next to the title of the authority. 136 These are the subsequent treatment symbols provided by each platform s citator that alert the researcher that an authority has received subsequent treatment. The color scheme further alerts the researcher as to how the original authority has been impacted by the subsequent treatment. Generally, citator symbols follow a traffic-light scheme wherein red means to stop because of severe negative treatment, such as an overruling, while yellow indicates caution for some subsequent criticism, and green gives the all clear for only positive subsequent 135 A computer-generated citator will at least link a researcher to subsequent citations of a source, even if the researcher would then need to read fully each subsequent citation to feel confident about a determination of impact. 136 On Westlaw Next, the symbols for the most part take the form of flags. On Lexis Advance, the symbols are different shapes, and Bloomberg Law uses colored squares with different shapes inside them.

137 136 treatment. 137 Thus, a researcher can tell at a glance whether a source is likely still good law. Note, however, that a good legal researcher will actually read the negative subsequent treatment, as even cases overruled on one issue (thereby receiving a red subsequent treatment symbol) may still be good law on a separate issue. Happily, integrated citators also allow a researcher quick access to the subsequent authorities that cite an original authority. This is because in addition to making a determination of validity from the aggregate of gathered subsequent citations, the citator will also generate a list of links that a researcher can follow to the gathered subsequent authorities. Upon opening a legal authority on WestlawNext, a researcher can select the citing references tab to see a list of all subsequent citations. Similarly, a researcher using Bloomberg Law can select the citing documents tab for the same results. On Lexis Advance, after one opens a document, he or she can click on the Shepardize this document link to the right of the opinion text to see all subsequent citations of the document. 138 Even better, each of the respective legal information providers have installed facets in their lists of subsequent citations, meaning that researchers can filter the results. In addition to the normal filters such as court, jurisdiction, and date, the citators include filters for type (positive, negative, distinguished, etc.) and depth of treatment. This allows researchers to focus quickly and efficiently on the subsequent authorities that are likely to have impacted the original authority the most. Researchers then can make their own determinations about whether the original authority remains valid. 137 BCite offers more nuanced categories than the other two services, and thus splits what would be red on West or LexisNexis into Red and Orange levels for different types of negative treatment. Similarly, while West and LexisNexis consider distinguishing to warrant a cautionary yellow, Bloomberg uses blue for distinguishing treatment and reserves yellow for more direct criticism. The basic pattern remains the same, however. 138 LexisNexis paid for the Shepard s brand name, and by golly they re going to use it!

138 137 Figure 5.5a: Shepardizing the seminal case Marbury v. Madison on Lexis Advance. Click here for screencast: Reprinted from LexisNexis with permission. Copyright 2015 LexisNexis. All rights reserved. The citator results do also include the normal filters, including the ability to create one s own filter by searching within results. Thus, in addition to updating the law, electronic citators can also act as a powerful research tool. For instance, if I wanted to find Kentucky cases on the doctrine of judicial review, and I know that Marbury v. Madison serves as the foundational case for judicial review in America, I can pull up Marbury v. Madison, Shepardize it, apply filters for Kentucky and search for the term judicial review, and quickly retrieve the relevant cases for my problem, as seen in Figure 5.5b.

139 138 Figure 5.5b: Using an electronic citator as a research tool. Click here for screencast: Reprinted from LexisNexis with permission. Copyright 2015 LexisNexis. All rights reserved. In addition to the filters that allow us to sort through the citator results, citators also supply the researcher with brief snippets of information about each subsequent citation on the citator results list. In Figure 5.5a we saw how the citators indicated the depth of discussion that the subsequent authorities contained regarding the original authority. Citators also provide a snapshot of how the subsequent authority itself has been cited. In Lexis Advance, the colored squares underneath the title of each subsequent citation indicate the relationship between the subsequent citation and the original authority. However, the colored symbols that appear directly after the title of the subsequent authority indicate how that authority itself has been treated by later authorities. On WestlawNext, the relationship between the original authority and the subsequent citation is indicated in the Treatment column of the citator results. But the flags that appear next to each subsequent citation describe how that opinion was subsequently treated. The placement of symbols on Bloomberg Law s BCite is substantially similar to that of WestlawNext. See Figure 5.5c for further explanation.

140 139 Figure 5.5c: Subsequent treatment upon subsequent treatment. Click here for screencast: Reprinted from LexisNexis with permission. Copyright 2015 LexisNexis. All rights reserved. Electronic citators have a few additional features beyond updating and expanding primary authority research. The History feature (called History on WestlawNext, Appellate History on Lexis Advance and Direct History on Bloomberg Law) lists opinions contained in the database that are related to the same case. If I wanted to see what happened after the United States Supreme Court remanded the case of Bowers v. Hardwick back to the 11th Circuit, I could go to the History tab on WestlawNext and find a list of prior and subsequent opinions tracing the case s way through the court system. See Figure 5.5d. This list will be limited to opinions that the database actually has in its system; in this case the opinion from the trial court is not available in WestlawNext and is thus not listed, though the researcher can determine from reading the appellate court opinions that the case started in Northern District of Georgia. In addition to the list of related opinions, for some cases WestlawNext and Lexis Advance will even provide a chart so the researcher can better visualize the relationship between opinions.

141 140 Figure 5.5d: Researching a case s history. Click here for screencast: In addition to providing citation lists of citing court opinions, citators also supply the researcher with secondary sources that cite back to the original authority. Looking at the secondary sources that cite to a primary authority can be a valuable way to find further analysis of the authority and related legal topics. 139 However, the secondary sources listed in each of the three citators will vary dramatically. While all three high-price legal research platforms carry a substantially similar set of primary authorities, their secondary sources will be more diverse. Budget model legal search platforms usually do not carry much in the way of secondary authority. Electronic citators can be used to find lists of primary and secondary authorities that cite back to statutes or regulations in much the same manner as a researcher would use them for opinions. While the same symbols used to indicate subsequent treatment for opinions are also used for statutes and regulations, they can convey slightly different information in this context. A yellow symbol for a statute or regulation may simply mean that a legislature or agency has proposed an amendment that has not yet been adopted. If the researcher practices in this area, such information has value for future reference, or to advise a client on future action, but it does not affect immediate application of the statute or regulation. A red symbol may mean that a statute or regulation has been declared unconstitutional or has been repealed. As with opinions, the researcher 139 Secondary sources will be discussed in more detail in Chapter 6.

142 141 should use the symbols as a guide for further investigating the currency of the statute or regulation. The extensive features of electronic citators give the legal researcher a significant advantage in researching efficiently, as well as a vastly superior way of updating the law. In these regards, they are representative of the efficiency of using computers for legal research in general. While a networked computer offers significant advantages to legal researchers in terms of time and efficiency, to achieve the maximum benefit from their capacity, a legal researcher in the twenty-first century needs to be able to communicate effectively with the computer and let it know what exactly the researcher wants to find. Legal researchers should use all means at their disposal to guide computers to what they want. Specifically, expert researchers engage in the techniques of searching, browsing, and filtering, and often combine the same. Furthermore, expert legal researchers know how to use electronic citators to their full potential. Aspiring legal researchers should practice using these same techniques and tools. Thus, law students are encouraged to try the exercises on the following pages.

143 Concluding Exercises for Chapter 5 Hone your skills by completing the following exercises on all the legal research platforms available to you Introductory Exercise on Electronic Research 1. Find the United States Supreme Court case in which Justice Jackson argued that, Compulsory unification of opinion achieves only the unanimity of the graveyard. 2. Find a 1971 case in which Satan was sued in federal court. 3. Find a pre-1990 Massachusetts case in which a goldfish is considered an animal for the purposes of enforcing a statute. 4. Find a 5th Circuit Court of Appeals Case from December 2010 regarding identity theft. 5. Find an Oregon case in which a divorce trial focused on the property rights associated with six frozen embryos.

144 Intermediate Exercise on Electronic Research Against your better judgment, shortly after graduating and passing the Kentucky bar, a heretofore slacker friend of yours, Joe Stoner, convinces you to sign on as General Counsel for his newly formed video game development company, Bluegrass Star Games. Honestly, you just agreed to be G.C. to stop Joe from pestering you while you looked for a more legitimate job. You never expected him actually to produce a single game. Contrary to your expectations, however, Joe has found his true calling in life and is nearing launch of the company s new centerpiece, Mary Jane s Marauding Moppets, in which puppet-like, anthropomorphic versions of common woodland animals engage in the illicit marijuana trade. (Some of the challenges of the game include: a mini-game on DEA Dodging, a social-networking style mini-game on Crop Watering/Farm simulation, and a supply and demand business distribution simulator. Joe swears the game will like, destroy preconceived notions of genre, man. ) Bluegrass Star Games is also offering a limited edition of the game that ships with a hollow, ceramic figurine of one of the woodland animal characters. The figurines look suspiciously like bongs. You decide that as General Counsel, you had better do some research. 1. Find a United States Supreme Court case from 2011 that struck down a California law regulating the sale of violent video games on First Amendment grounds. a. Has it received any negative treatment? Describe that treatment in general terms. b. Has any Kentucky state court decision cited this case? 2. Find the U.S.C. provision prohibiting the sale of drug paraphernalia. a. Do you see anything that might affect the validity of this statute? b. Have there been any federal cases in the 8 th Circuit Court of Appeals that discuss this statute?

145 Advanced Exercise on Electronic Research Our firm represents Fionn and Siobhán Ó Brádaigh, primary shareholders of Emerald Herbs, an herbal health supplement shop in southeast Lexington, KY. Emerald Herbs also features an online retail site and operates its own herb-growing facilities. Emerald Herbs is organized as a closely held corporation and employs a total of 56 individuals full-time. The herbal supplement business is surprisingly lucrative, and the Ó Brádaighs are very good clients of ours. Unfortunately, they are currently locked in two separate legal disputes. Dispute 1 - State Law & Free Exercise of Religion It seems that in addition to working for Emerald Herbs, the majority of employees also belong to the Jessamine Grove of the Reformed Druids of North America (RDNA), a neo-pagan religious organization. Siobhán Ó Brádaigh, in fact, serves as the Arch-Druid of the Jessamine Grove. Amongst the tenets of the Jessamine Grove is that its members are to cut no living tree. This tenet conflicts with a Lexington ordinance requiring trees to be trimmed to 7 clearance above sidewalks. Several trees in Emerald Herbs parking lot feature branches that extend to only 5 above the neighboring sidewalk. Lexington s authority to create ordinances stems from the Kentucky legislature through KRS ch. 67A on consolidated urbancounty governments. 1. A federal law was enacted in 1993, the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA), that was intended to prevent government from passing laws substantially burdening an individual s free exercise of religion. Please find the federal statutes comprising the RFRA. Does it apply to state laws? 2. Is the statute you used to answer Q1 still good law? Why or why not? 3. What are our clients chances of successfully using the RFRA to escape enforcement of Lexington s tree ordinance? Dispute 2 - Federal Law & Free Exercise of Religion Additionally, because of the number of employees, Emerald Herbs is subject to the employer mandate of the federal Affordable Care Act. However, the Ó Brádaighs, as well as the other members of the Jessamine Grove, object on religious grounds to every available prescription coverage plan because they all include products from drug companies with extremely poor environmental records.

146 We are investigating whether to file an injunction in the Eastern District of Kentucky to relieve Emerald Herbs of its duty to provide the Affordable Care Act healthcare plans due to the burden it places on the Ó Brádaighs freedom of religion. Please find the section of the RFRA that explicitly states that the free exercise of religion is protected. Are there any binding federal cases citing to that section in which a party is objecting to provisions of the Affordable Care Act on religious grounds? 5. What are our clients chances of successfully using the RFRA to avoid paying a penalty under the Affordable Care Act for not providing insurance plans to employees?

147 Recommended CALI Lessons for Further Practice CALI hosts an impressive number of interactive lessons on its website. The following lessons on electronic research touch upon material covered in this chapter. They would be a great place to start for students looking for further practice on the concepts introduced in this chapter! Introduction to Search Logic and Strategies by Sarah E. Gotschall Summary: an introduction to searching and using search operators. Lesson ID: LR59 URL: Using Citators as Finding Tools by Brian Huddleston Summary: an overview of how citators may be used to expand research. Covers print as well as electronic citators, though some of the screenshots of electronic citators are from earlier editions of Lexis and Westlaw. Lesson ID: LR104 URL: Updating/Validating Case Law Using Citators by Rebecca S. Trammell and Ashley Krenelka Chase Summary: an overview of using citators to update caselaw. Covers print as well as electronic citators. Uses an earlier version of Lexis Advance. Lesson ID: LWR 36 URL:

148 Cost of Legal Research by Lauren Michelle Collins and Emily Janoski-Haehlen Summary: an introduction to the costs associated with using full-service legal search providers and strategies that can be used to mitigate those costs. Lesson ID: LR49 URL: Internet Legal Resources Free Resources by Resa Kerns, Cindy Shearrer, and Todd Venie Summary: an introduction to free electronic legal resources available outside of the major legal research platforms. Lesson ID: LR18 URL: Evaluating Web Sites by Susan Llano and Erin Murphy Summary: provides a practical framework for improving information literacy, especially as it relates to sites on the open web. Lesson ID: LWR39 URL:

149 148 Chapter 6 Secondary Sources If I have seen farther, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants. Sir Isaac Newton 6.1 Learning Objectives for This Chapter In working through this chapter, students should strive to be able to: Describe various types of secondary sources. Assess when to use a general secondary source vs. an in-depth, topical secondary source. Find an appropriate secondary source for any discrete legal issue. Use secondary sources in print or online to research a specific legal issue.

150 Overview of Legal Secondary Sources This text has so far discussed primary legal authorities and the methods for locating them. Now we turn our attention to secondary authorities, also called secondary sources, which are the sources researchers often use to begin their research. Legal secondary sources are texts that provide commentary and analysis of the law for the benefit of the reader. Secondary sources come in a variety of forms; they can be general or detailed, cover a specific jurisdiction, and they are written for a wide range of audiences. Different secondary sources may be employed at different stages of the research process; the choice of secondary source may also rest on the researcher s prior knowledge of the topic. This chapter will describe the most common types of secondary sources the researcher is likely to encounter, when they should (and should not) be used, and a variety of methods for locating them Common Types of Secondary Sources Law students and aspiring legal researches will likely encounter a broad range of secondary sources. In the following sections, we briefly describe some of the common types of secondary sources used by legal researchers. Figure provides a quick-glance summary of the strengths and weaknesses of each type of secondary source described.

151 150 Secondary Source Legal encyclopedias Practice Series & Materials American Law Reports (ALRs) Restatements Model Codes & Uniform Acts Treatises Form books Law Review & Journal Articles. Advantages & Disadvantages More breadth and less depth; a very general introduction to many legal topics. Low citability. Breadth and depth vary by source, as does the amount of commentary. Citability thus varies; typically low. Useful in jurisdiction-specific research. More breadth and less depth; annotations contain summary but not analysis. Useful to start research on narrow topics and for jurisdictional comparisons. Low citability. Highly credible and thus highly citable. Indepth coverage on areas of traditional common law. Focus on areas governed by statutory law and provide extensive annotations to relevant caselaw. Treats a subject in depth but breadth varies. Citability sometimes high but varies depending on the reputation of the treatise. Useful for identifying the pieces necessary to a type of legal document. In-depth treatment on a narrow area of law; not updated once published. Quality and thus citability varies. Figure 6.2.1: An Overview of Secondary Source Types Legal Encyclopedias Legal encyclopedias are the most general of secondary sources. They have more breadth than depth and so can provide an introduction to a wide range of legal topics. If the researcher is unfamiliar with an area of law and needs a list of the major primary authorities in the area as a starting point for further research on the issue, legal encyclopedias are a solid place for him to begin his research. They are, as one would expect from the term

152 151 encyclopedia, organized alphabetically by topic. American Jurisprudence 2d (Am. Jur. 2d) and the Corpus Juris Secundum (C.J.S.) are two of the most widely known legal encyclopedias. Some states have jurisdiction-specific legal encyclopedias, such as Ohio Jurisprudence 3d Practice Series & Practice Materials Practice series resemble legal encyclopedias in that they cover a variety of legal topics, though perhaps not as many as a legal encyclopedia, and they tend to be jurisdiction-specific. They are usually written by practitioners or scholars specializing in that jurisdiction and may contain descriptions of the current state of the law, some analysis of the law, and possibly forms relating to a particular topic. They tend to be organized by topic and can be one volume or many. Other practice materials may be form books, discussed further in section , or process-oriented guides as to how litigation on a topic normally proceeds. Materials in the latter category may explain how litigation on a topic proceeds and the court filings and documentation typically seen in such cases. Practice series and other practice-oriented materials can sometimes resemble treatises in their depth of coverage on specific topics. In fact, whether an item should be deemed a treatise or a practice material can be a gray area, and these sources are often found using similar methods that will be discussed later in this chapter American Law Reports (ALRs) The American Law Reports is a set of hundreds of volumes which are filled with articles called annotations. ALRs provide an odd combination of breadth and depth; the number of topics covered is vast but those topics are much more specific than those in an encyclopedia. The annotations summarize caselaw on those narrow topics across jurisdictions; the function is more of a report on the current state of the law rather than an analysis of the law as one would find in a topical treatise. Each annotation contains a table of the relevant primary authorities described in the annotation organized by jurisdiction which can be a quick reference for finding primary authorities on that topic across jurisdictions. There are six series of the ALRs covering state law, the most recent being the ALR 6 th. The ALR Federal covers federal topics and is on its second series.

153 Restatements & Principles of Law Restatements are publications by the American Law Institute (ALI) that clarify and organize the existing state of caselaw on a given topic, or, in other words, restate the law. The restatements contain analysis on an area of law, summarize and refer to caselaw across jurisdictions, and may offer suggestions on how the legal system could clarify an area of law going forward. Because the ALI is composed of a large number of legal scholars and practitioners who are the experts in their fields, the restatements are generally considered to be among the most persuasive of the secondary sources of law. In fact, they are often cited by judicial opinions, particularly when there is no binding authority on point. Many of the restatements are on their third series and are published by topic. Some of the more well-known restatements are those covering the laws of agency, contracts, property, torts, trusts, and unfair competition. A complete list of topics may be found on the ALI website. The ALI also publishes recommendations on areas of the law that need to be updated; these publications are called Principles and cover a wide variety of legal topics. These can be useful to a practitioner looking for guidance on how to present to the court on an area of unsettled or outdated law Model Codes & Uniform Acts The ALI and the Uniform Law Commission both publish model codes and uniform acts to advocate standards or to improve organization in certain areas of the law. Just as the name implies, these publications are written in the form of model statutes that jurisdictions can adopt in part or whole into their own statutory codes. Examples that are familiar to first year law students are the Uniform Commercial Code and the Model Penal Code; a full listing can be seen on the Uniform Law Commission website and the ALI website. These publications contain annotations detailing how these model statutes have been adopted and implemented in various jurisdictions and thus can be a rich source of primary authority for a researcher Treatises Treatises are comprehensive texts on a narrow legal subject. They generally provide much more discussion and analysis of the legal topic than a legal encyclopedia or ALR annotation while also leading the researcher to primary authorities through references and citations. They

154 153 may or may not be jurisdiction-specific and can vary in length from one to dozens of volumes. Treatises are often named after their authors, e.g., Nimmer on Copyright, Farnsworth on Contracts. Some treatises are highly reputable in a given field, but the quality can run the gamut. Consulting a subject-specific research guide or a research expert may be the quickest method to locate the most credible title for a specific legal topic Form Books While each legal problem is distinct and each client unique, often the output of legal practice takes standardized forms. For instance, partnership agreements, while differing in the details, are generally structured in the same way. On the litigation side, while motions will employ unique arguments depending on the circumstances, the motions themselves will follow a standard format. Thus, one of the more useful types of secondary source in practice are form books, which publish blank templates or forms that lawyers can use in crafting their own legal documents. Usually, some explanatory text, similar to what you would see in a treatise, accompanies the templates. Form books may be either jurisdiction specific or neutral; they may also be topical specific or cover a wide variety of subjects. West s Legal Forms is an example of a general, jurisdiction-neutral form set. Published sets of pattern jury instructions, on the other hand, are topically specific and are often published for specific jurisdictions Law Reviews & Journals Law reviews and journals contain scholarly articles primarily written by law professors on various specialized areas of law. Journals are published periodically and may contain articles on a particular subject area (e.g. Harvard Journal on Racial and Ethnic Justice) or articles in a wide variety of subjects (e.g. Harvard Law Review). Individual articles, however, usually address a very narrow area of the law. Furthermore, they tend to focus on underdeveloped or rarely-visited areas of the law and thus often contain information not found elsewhere. For this reason, they can be a rich resource for identifying not only relevant primary authority on that narrow topic but also secondary authorities on point. For the same reason, they are occasionally cited as persuasive authority by judicial opinions.

155 Uses of Secondary Sources As indicated above, different secondary sources are employed for different research scenarios. Typically the researcher will use a secondary source to educate himself on an unfamiliar area of law, unfamiliar jurisdiction, or as a method to quickly identify relevant primary authorities on a given topic. Sections and address these uses in more detail. While secondary sources are extremely useful tools for the research process, the researcher will not ordinarily cite to them in formal memorandums or court documents. He should never rely on a secondary source s analysis of a primary authority; he must always review the primary authorities and conduct his own analysis relative to the specific facts of the legal issue that he is researching. Additionally, some areas of the law change rapidly and secondary sources vary widely in their currentness; a researcher will always need to perform additional research to make sure he is working with the most recent primary authorities on the issue. There are, however, exceptions to every rule, and section describes scenarios in which citing to secondary authorities may be appropriate For an Overview A researcher may need to consult a secondary resource for an overview of an unfamiliar area of law, of an unfamiliar jurisdiction, or of an overdeveloped area of law. When researching an unfamiliar area of law or jurisdiction, a secondary source will give the researcher a quick overview of the state of the law in a specific legal area or in a specific jurisdiction. For an unfamiliar area of law, a general resource such as a legal encyclopedia may be the best place to start; once the researcher has a basic introduction, he may move on to a treatise or practice guide. A jurisdiction-specific legal encyclopedia would be beneficial for the researcher working with the law in a state in which he does not typically practice. A jurisdiction-specific practice series may be beneficial both for gaining an understanding of the topic in the researcher s home jurisdiction, or he may want to identify a practice series in a new jurisdiction to see how it differs from his. When researching in an overdeveloped area of the law, the researcher may find that he is overwhelmed by the number of primary authorities available on a particular topic. Separating the most relevant authorities from the multitude can be a time-consuming process, but a topic-specific secondary source may give the researcher a head start. A treatise on the topic will

156 155 highlight the most important primary authorities in a given area, saving the researcher the time of identifying them himself. In any of the above scenarios, the secondary source will also yield another important resource: relevant terminology to the topic. A different jurisdiction may use legal phrases to which the researcher is unaccustomed; an unfamiliar or overdeveloped area of law may have sub-topics or concepts previously unknown to him. The secondary materials will help the researcher grasp the appropriate terminology and concepts. Armed with the appropriate vocabulary, he can then pursue primary authorities using the methods described in earlier chapters As a Pathfinder One of the most useful features of secondary sources is that they direct researchers to primary authorities, and sometimes other secondary authorities, on the topic. An ALR article may summarize cases on a narrow topic across jurisdictions; a treatise will not only summarize the cases but provide detailed analysis of opinions on a particular legal issue; a jurisdiction-specific practice series will highlight the critical cases on the topic in that state. For underdeveloped areas of law, a scholarly article on point can direct the researcher to a wealth of excellent materials. That scholar has likely performed months, if not years, of research, identified the most relevant primary authorities, and consulted the most authoritative secondary sources on the topic To Cite as Persuasive Authority There are scenarios in which it is appropriate to cite to persuasive authority in your legal writing. Typically this occurs in areas of law that are either underdeveloped or overdeveloped. When an area of law is overdeveloped, the amount of relevant primary authority to be found can be staggering. It may be difficult to narrow down the appropriate cases to cite to support a particular legal proposition. In such a scenario, it may be prudent to cite a Restatement instead of hundreds of cases that have developed a particular proposition. If that Restatement is cited in precedent from your jurisdiction, it is an indication that it may be appropriate to use it for the same purpose. Some treatises are held in similarly high regard and used in a similar manner. Citing to secondary authority may also be appropriate in the opposite scenario: when an area of law is new or underdeveloped in a particular jurisdiction. Persuasive authorities, including secondary sources, are used

157 156 more often when primary authorities on point are scarce. If your legal problem is a case of first impression in a jurisdiction, i.e. there are no precedents, a suggestion from a law review article or a restatement on how to resolve the issue may be suitable. 6.3 Researching Secondary Sources Now let us turn to how legal researchers find and utilize secondary sources Finding an Appropriate Secondary Source Because secondary sources vary widely in type and format, and often have similar or nondescript titles, finding an appropriate source for the legal issue at hand can be challenging. Ideally the researcher will want to start with a resource that identifies secondary sources by topic, type, or both Browsing by Topic or Jurisdiction On a Full-Service Legal Information Platform Some online legal research platforms, such as Bloomberg Law, WestlawNext, or Lexis Advance, allow the researcher to browse their secondary resources by topic and perhaps the types of secondary sources on that topic. Such categorization may be broad or narrow. For example, one platform may have a single category for Intellectual Property, while another may further sub-divide that subject area into Copyright, Unfair Competition, Trademarks, and Patents. Figure a shows how WestlawNext uses the broad category of Intellectual Property and then provides a listing of secondary sources by type: ALRs, Texts & Treatises, Law Reviews & Journal, Forms, and more.

158 157 Figure a: Types of Intellectural Property Secondary Sources on WestlawNext. Some platforms will also allow the researcher to browse the secondary sources available that relate to a specific jurisdiction. On Lexis Advance, the Browse Sources screen provides filters to narrow the list of titles by

159 158 category or type of resource, jurisdiction, and practice areas and topics. These filters are indicated by arrows in Figure b. Figure b: Filters for Narrowing Sources in Lexis Advance. Reprinted from LexisNexis with permission. Copyright 2015 LexisNexis. All rights reserved. Once the researcher has browsed and narrowed down the platform s secondary sources to those on a particular topic, he can either use the finding aids to work with a specific source or use the search techniques described in Chapter 5 to search across the topical sources. The secondary sources available on the three major legal research platforms vary widely as they each produce, or own publishers that produce, different titles. Some major titles (e.g. ALRs, Restatements) are available on multiple platforms due to licensing arrangements, but specific

160 159 treatises and practice materials typically are not. If a researcher has access to more than platform, he may need to check more than one to find appropriate secondary sources on point Online Catalogs Online catalogs are another starting point for finding both print and electronic resources on point. For law students, the law school library will have an online catalog containing records of its print and electronic resources. Most importantly, each record will have one or more Library of Congress subject headings associated with it. The researcher can search the subject headings directly in a fielded search, or he can search the catalog by keyword and then browse the subject headings found on records that appear to be relevant. Records for print resources will provide him with call numbers for locating the item in the library s physical collection; records for electronic resources will contain links directly to the resource online. These catalogs can be useful for practitioners as well. A law firm may have its own catalog the researcher can use as a starting place to identify resources held by your firm. If an organization does not have its own catalog, researchers can use collaborative catalogs such as Worldcat to identify resources. Because libraries from all over the world contribute their records to Worldcat, it can be an excellent starting point to identify the world of resources available on a given topic. A researcher may then check to see if his organization has access to those resources or use Worldcat to identify the libraries nearby that may provide access to those resources. Figure : Using Worldcat to find a Treatise. Click here for screencast:

161 Online Research Guides Another excellent starting point for finding topical secondary resources are research guides created by law librarians. Most university law libraries feature designated webpages to guide researchers to the items in the library s collection relating to particular legal subjects. These guides may identify the most highly-regarded secondary sources on topic, give instructions for how to use particular resources, and discuss methods for further research for primary and secondary authorities on point. There are a few ways to find these online research guides. One strategy would be to look at the law library websites for the law schools in the jurisdiction in which you are researching. Those websites will list their research guides and may well provide jurisdiction-specific information. Another strategy would be to utilize Google or another web search engine to search research guides across institutions. By using the site:.edu search operator on Google, you may restrict your search query to look only at educational websites. If you include the legal topic you are researching and the term legal research, the search results will primarily be from research guides developed by law school librarians. For instance the following search will return librarian-produced research guides that will lead researchers to products liability treatises: site:edu AND products liability AND legal research Of course, if you have access to one, even better than consulting a librarianproduced research guide would be consulting an actual librarian Asking a Reference Librarian or an Information Professional In the current era, so much information is available in just a few clicks online we sometimes forget that asking a knowledgeable individual for assistance remains an option. However, as many of the strategies discussed in this book indicate, the amount of information that is a few clicks away can be the problem. Asking a reference librarian or another individual, such as a practicing attorney, knowledgeable about the area in which the researcher is investigating is sometimes the quickest way to find relevant materials on point. Reference librarians are the people most familiar with their collections, whether that be a law school library or the library of a private organization. They are experts in utilizing many of the systems described in this text and those specific to their own institutions. Their

162 161 jobs are not only to be familiar with those systems and resources but also to help others navigate them. If the researcher is unsure of where to begin his research or has reached a roadblock after pursuing a variety of leads, a reference librarian, an attorney specializing in that area of law, or other legal information specialist may be able to guide him to resources to propel him forward Using Secondary Sources in Print Like codes, secondary sources tend to possess an inherent topical organization. Thus, expert researchers often find the use of print secondary sources to be more efficient than electronic versions. We will briefly discuss the chief methods of use of secondary sources in print Organization & Finding Aids Some print secondary sources are organized chronologically, but most are organized by topic. A legal encyclopedia is organized alphabetically by general topic; a subject treatise is organized in a logical progression of subtopics; a practice series may be organized by general subject area and then specific subtopics. Skimming the table of contents can be a quick way of identifying the major topics covered by the source. A secondary source set consisting of a large number of volumes may have different levels of tables of contents much as a statutory code does: a table of contents for the entire set, a table of contents for a chapter, or even more granular levels. Article-based secondary sources such as ALRs or legal encyclopedias will usually have a table of contents at the beginning of an article. Even with multiple levels of tables of contents, the index is often the researcher s best starting point. Indexes alphabetize in detailed lists the topics and sub-topics covered by the source; they are far more detailed than even the most specific table of contents. Most secondary sources will have an index published at the end of the volume or in the last volume of the set if the source consists of multiple volumes. Secondary sources may also include tables listing primary authorities along with references to where the authorities are discussed in the text. This can be useful if the researcher has a citation to a particular source of law on which he is interested in finding further analysis. Such tables are usually also located at the end of a volume or set and may be called a Table of Cases or Table of Authorities. For the secondary sources organized chronologically, the utilization of the relevant finding aids is critical. For example, the annotations in ALRs are

163 162 published in chronological order. There may be more than one article on divorce and child custody, but they will not be found in close physical proximity the way they would be in a practice series. The only way to identify annotations that discuss a particular topic is to use the available index. Law reviews and journal are also published chronologically; relevant finding aids are discussed in section Updating in Print Topical secondary sources in print may be published either in bound volumes or in loose-leaf fashion. As discussed with digests and statutory codes earlier, hardbound volumes are expensive to produce and so hardbound secondary sources are updated in a similar manner to their primary authority counterparts. Pocket parts are used to update individual volumes and will be found in a pocket at the back of a volume; supplements may be stand-alone soft-bound publications relating to an individual volume for a particular set or may be an update to the set as a whole. Loose-leafs are an alternative publication format that makes integrating updates into the text somewhat easier. Loose-leafs is the term used to refer to treatises or practice materials that are published in a binder rather than a bound volume. To update loose-leafs, the publisher of a title sends pages to replace those that have become dated. The old pages are removed and the new pages inserted; the table of contents, index, and other finding aids of the volume may be updated as well to reflect the new content. This method of updating eliminates a step for the researcher; there is no need to consult additional parts in the set to update the material, as required with hardbound sets. The disadvantage to this updating method is that it can be hard to track down what that secondary source said at a given moment in time, as a researcher might need to do when tracking down secondary sources cited in older documents. Every print title has a slightly different updating schedule and process, whether in hardbound or looseleaf format. If a researcher needs assistance in updating a resource, he should contact a reference librarian for assistance Using Electronic Secondary Sources Using electronic secondary sources gives researchers an additional finding aid: keyword searching. Many of the legal research platforms allow you to perform a keyword search across the content of the entire platform. As a practical matter, this is often not the best approach to finding relevant

164 163 secondary sources. A general keyword search is likely to bring back thousands of results from a wide variety of sources. Sorting through the results of such a general search to determine what type of source the material came from and if it is on point or merely mentioning the topic of interest in passing can be time-consuming. Narrowing the search first by browsing as described in section to find materials on point and then searching across materials on the topic or searching within a specific title is usually more efficient. Alternatively, the researcher may be able to perform a keyword search and then use post-search filters to narrow the results list before perusing them. Researchers can utilize many of the same search strategies described in Chapter 5 for researching primary authorities. While keyword searching is an additional finding aid for accessing secondary sources, it is not necessarily a superior option to the traditional finding aids. Often the researcher is using a secondary source to become familiar with an area of law and to begin building a vocabulary to be used in primary source research. So, if the researcher does not yet know the appropriate vocabulary to the topic, keyword searching may not get him very far. Though the temptation to search is there, do not overlook a source s inherent organizational structure. Browsing the table of contents can be as effective in the electronic universe as it is in print, particularly if the researcher is unfamiliar with the relevant terminology used for the topic. In addition to the table of contents, the legal research platform or publisher may reproduce other finding aids that are useful in print. Check to see if an electronic version of the index has been included; again, the index is extremely useful when one is unfamiliar with the terminology that would allow you to search. Sometimes such an index may be just a reproduction of the print, requiring you to search the document via the Find feature in your browser (control+f or command+f). For some sources, the index may be searchable on the platform.

165 164 Figure 6.3.3: Using an electronic index. Click here for screencast: Law Review & Journal Articles Scholarly legal journals publish articles on many topics but lack any internal topical organization. Luckily, researchers may use several electronic tools to find articles on topics of interest Indexes Finding relevant law review and journal articles is a somewhat different task than finding other secondary sources described in this chapter. Thousands of law reviews are published every year across hundreds of individual publications. Checking each title for articles on a topic is impractical. Fortunately, there are publications that index those thousands upon thousands of articles by topic. There are two such general indexes in print: Index to Legal Periodicals and Books and the Current Law Index. Like Shepard s Citator, however, these publications are often no longer carried by libraries, as their online incarnations are superior tools. The electronic versions are the commercial databases Index to Legal Periodicals & Books (ILP), now available through EBSCO, and LegalTrac, available through Gale Cengage, respectively. Most university law libraries subscribe to one or both. These indexes cover roughly 1980 to the present; to research older articles you need to use a separate index, the Index to Legal Periodicals Retrospective. There are also indexes that cover specific legal practice areas, such as the Index to Foreign Legal Periodicals (on HeinOnline).

166 165 These electronic indexes allow the researcher to search their records by keyword, author, or subject. Depending on the subscription, these indexes may provide full-text of some or none of the articles. If the latter, a search may provide the researcher only with an abstract and a citation; he will need to find the full-text article by using another resource such as those described in the next section Full-text Commercial Platforms Apart from indexes, there are several legal information platforms that allow researchers to perform full-text searches across all the journal articles available on the platform. HeinOnline is the platform with the most comprehensive coverage of law school reviews and journals, though it sometimes will not contain the most recent issues. WestlawNext and Lexis Advance also have selections of journals on their platforms and are more likely to contain the most recent issues. Again, the researcher can utilize many of the search techniques described in Chapter 5 when searching on these platforms. Figure 6.3.6: HeinOnline and journal research. Click here for screencast: Free Resources There are also free resources available online for searching scholarly legal publications. Many universities promote their faculty by participating in open access repositories and are thus making their faculty scholarship available for free online. There are several ways to find such materials; this text will highlight three.

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